"We are all ill: but even a universal sickness implies an idea of health"
About this Quote
The intent is critical, not clinical. As a literary critic watching ideology harden into lifestyle, Trilling distrusts both the puritan certainty that declares the world fallen and the fashionable relativism that declares “health” a repressive fiction. He threads the needle: yes, we may be implicated, distorted, estranged; no, that doesn’t abolish the possibility of judgment. The sentence works because it uses the language of medicine to expose a rhetorical trick. When a culture claims that everyone is broken, it smuggles in a baseline of wholeness even as it pretends that baseline is unavailable.
Subtext: the critic’s job remains viable. Interpretation, discrimination, and even moral seriousness still have ground to stand on, precisely because our talk of “sickness” betrays our longing for “health.” In Trilling’s context - postwar anxieties, the rise of mass culture, and intellectuals sparring over liberalism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis - it’s a compact argument for uneasy realism: admit the malaise, resist the romance of despair, keep the idea of health alive as a measuring stick.
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Trilling, Lionel. (2026, January 16). We are all ill: but even a universal sickness implies an idea of health. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-all-ill-but-even-a-universal-sickness-129877/
Chicago Style
Trilling, Lionel. "We are all ill: but even a universal sickness implies an idea of health." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-all-ill-but-even-a-universal-sickness-129877/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"We are all ill: but even a universal sickness implies an idea of health." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-all-ill-but-even-a-universal-sickness-129877/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.










