"My idea of a writer: someone interested in everything"
About this Quote
Sontag turns “writer” into a temperament rather than a job title, and the line lands with the dry authority of someone who spent her life refusing to stay in one lane. “Interested in everything” isn’t a cute boast about curiosity; it’s an ethic. It implies that writing begins before the desk, in the posture you take toward the world: alert, promiscuously attentive, unwilling to let culture sort itself into “high” and “low,” “political” and “personal,” “serious” and “mere entertainment.”
The subtext is also disciplinary. Sontag is drawing a boundary against the writer as brand specialist, the novelist who only “does” relationships, the critic who only “does” movies, the public intellectual who only “does” hot takes. Her career - essays that move from photography to illness metaphors to war reporting to camp aesthetics - models a method: follow fascination, then apply ruthless intelligence. Interest, for her, isn’t passive consumption; it’s a form of moral attention. To be interested in everything is to refuse the comfort of ignorance, to treat experience as something you can’t outsource to ideology or tribe.
Context matters: Sontag wrote in a postwar America where mass media exploded, academia professionalized, and the culture wars hardened categories. The line reads like a quiet rebuke to all of it. The writer’s real credential isn’t expertise; it’s appetite plus seriousness. “Everything” is a provocation: if you’re bored, she suggests, it’s not the world that’s thin - it’s your attention.
The subtext is also disciplinary. Sontag is drawing a boundary against the writer as brand specialist, the novelist who only “does” relationships, the critic who only “does” movies, the public intellectual who only “does” hot takes. Her career - essays that move from photography to illness metaphors to war reporting to camp aesthetics - models a method: follow fascination, then apply ruthless intelligence. Interest, for her, isn’t passive consumption; it’s a form of moral attention. To be interested in everything is to refuse the comfort of ignorance, to treat experience as something you can’t outsource to ideology or tribe.
Context matters: Sontag wrote in a postwar America where mass media exploded, academia professionalized, and the culture wars hardened categories. The line reads like a quiet rebuke to all of it. The writer’s real credential isn’t expertise; it’s appetite plus seriousness. “Everything” is a provocation: if you’re bored, she suggests, it’s not the world that’s thin - it’s your attention.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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