"Today, as never before, the fates of men are so intimately linked to one another that a disaster for one is a disaster for everybody"
About this Quote
The line lands with the quiet authority of someone who watched ideology turn into paperwork, and paperwork turn into ruin. Ginzburg isn’t offering a sentimental plea for togetherness; she’s issuing a diagnosis. “Today, as never before” has the chill of a period marker: the modern age has rewired causality. What used to look like “their problem” has become a shared bill, arriving faster than moral reckoning can.
Her phrasing does a lot of covert work. “Fates” sounds old-world, almost mythic, but she yokes it to the most contemporary reality imaginable: interdependence. That collision is the point. The era of individual destinies has been overtaken by systems - war, markets, migration, propaganda, industry - that make private lives collectively vulnerable. “Intimately linked” is intentionally tactile; it suggests entanglement, not alliance. You don’t have to like one another to be bound.
The subtext is also a rebuke to the comfortable fantasy that catastrophe can be quarantined. After fascism and World War II, “disaster” isn’t abstract: it’s deportations, bombings, shortages, the sudden legal reclassification of a neighbor into an enemy. Ginzburg’s Italy learned that national decisions seep into kitchens and marriages. The sentence implies responsibility without preaching it: if harm ricochets, then indifference becomes complicity, not because you feel guilty, but because the architecture of modern life makes it irrational to pretend you’re insulated.
Read now, it anticipates the politics of contagion, climate, supply chains, and digital radicalization: the modern world’s cruel trick is that connection is unavoidable, while solidarity remains optional.
Her phrasing does a lot of covert work. “Fates” sounds old-world, almost mythic, but she yokes it to the most contemporary reality imaginable: interdependence. That collision is the point. The era of individual destinies has been overtaken by systems - war, markets, migration, propaganda, industry - that make private lives collectively vulnerable. “Intimately linked” is intentionally tactile; it suggests entanglement, not alliance. You don’t have to like one another to be bound.
The subtext is also a rebuke to the comfortable fantasy that catastrophe can be quarantined. After fascism and World War II, “disaster” isn’t abstract: it’s deportations, bombings, shortages, the sudden legal reclassification of a neighbor into an enemy. Ginzburg’s Italy learned that national decisions seep into kitchens and marriages. The sentence implies responsibility without preaching it: if harm ricochets, then indifference becomes complicity, not because you feel guilty, but because the architecture of modern life makes it irrational to pretend you’re insulated.
Read now, it anticipates the politics of contagion, climate, supply chains, and digital radicalization: the modern world’s cruel trick is that connection is unavoidable, while solidarity remains optional.
Quote Details
| Topic | Peace |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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