"I thought, if ever there were a time to write a book about hope, it's now"
About this Quote
Hope, in Studs Terkel's hands, is never a scented candle; it's a tool you grip when the lights flicker. "I thought, if ever there were a time to write a book about hope, it's now" lands with the plainspoken urgency of a working reporter who has watched the news cycle grind people down and still refuses to romanticize despair as sophistication. The power is in the conditional - "if ever" - a phrase that carries accumulated evidence. He's not discovering hope; he's measuring the moment against decades of strikes, wars, demagogues, and daily humiliations, then deciding the scale has tipped.
Terkel's intent is both editorial and moral: to insist that hope is not escapism but a public resource worth documenting. Coming from the oral historian of ordinary Americans, the subtext is that hope isn't a private mood, it's something you can hear in voices - in the way people endure layoffs, racism, illness, and still make plans. He positions the book as an intervention: when institutions fail and rhetoric turns poisonous, collect testimony that keeps the civic imagination from collapsing.
Context matters because Terkel often wrote in periods when "realism" was marketed as cynicism. He answers that pose with an almost stubborn decency. The line also quietly admits fear: "now" implies a precipice, a recognition that the cultural default has become resignation. By choosing the modest verb "write" instead of "fight" or "save", he signals his method: hope as reportage, assembled from facts, contradictions, and people who haven't been granted the luxury of nihilism.
Terkel's intent is both editorial and moral: to insist that hope is not escapism but a public resource worth documenting. Coming from the oral historian of ordinary Americans, the subtext is that hope isn't a private mood, it's something you can hear in voices - in the way people endure layoffs, racism, illness, and still make plans. He positions the book as an intervention: when institutions fail and rhetoric turns poisonous, collect testimony that keeps the civic imagination from collapsing.
Context matters because Terkel often wrote in periods when "realism" was marketed as cynicism. He answers that pose with an almost stubborn decency. The line also quietly admits fear: "now" implies a precipice, a recognition that the cultural default has become resignation. By choosing the modest verb "write" instead of "fight" or "save", he signals his method: hope as reportage, assembled from facts, contradictions, and people who haven't been granted the luxury of nihilism.
Quote Details
| Topic | Hope |
|---|---|
| Source | Hope Dies Last: Keeping the Faith in Troubled Times — Studs Terkel, The New Press, 2013 (book; quote attributed to Terkel in the book's opening/introductory material). |
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