"I value peace when it is not bought at the price of fundamental decencies"
About this Quote
Peace is usually sold as the grown-up choice: calm down, stop making trouble, keep the room tidy. Kazan’s line refuses that bargain. He draws a hard boundary between quiet and cowardice, between social harmony and the moral rot that can hide inside it. The phrasing matters: “value” is measured, almost managerial, but “fundamental decencies” is primal. He’s telling you he’s not addicted to conflict; he’s addicted to not living in shame.
The subtext is inseparable from Kazan’s own biography: the celebrated director who named names before the House Un-American Activities Committee, splitting the artistic community and staining his legacy. Read one way, the quote is a defense mechanism polished into principle: a way to argue that breaking solidarity, courting public outrage, and detonating friendships were the necessary costs of keeping his conscience intact. “Peace,” in that context, can mean the seductive option of staying silent, keeping one’s career safe, and preserving the industry’s façade of unity.
Read another way, it’s a self-indictment he may not have intended. The sentence quietly admits how often “peace” is purchased through someone else’s humiliation. The line’s power is its prosecutorial clarity: it forces the listener to name what they’re trading away for comfort. In a film culture that loves redemption arcs and hates messy compromises, Kazan’s maxim lands like a dare: if you want civility, prove it doesn’t require cruelty.
The subtext is inseparable from Kazan’s own biography: the celebrated director who named names before the House Un-American Activities Committee, splitting the artistic community and staining his legacy. Read one way, the quote is a defense mechanism polished into principle: a way to argue that breaking solidarity, courting public outrage, and detonating friendships were the necessary costs of keeping his conscience intact. “Peace,” in that context, can mean the seductive option of staying silent, keeping one’s career safe, and preserving the industry’s façade of unity.
Read another way, it’s a self-indictment he may not have intended. The sentence quietly admits how often “peace” is purchased through someone else’s humiliation. The line’s power is its prosecutorial clarity: it forces the listener to name what they’re trading away for comfort. In a film culture that loves redemption arcs and hates messy compromises, Kazan’s maxim lands like a dare: if you want civility, prove it doesn’t require cruelty.
Quote Details
| Topic | Ethics & Morality |
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