"What we need is to use what we have"
About this Quote
The genius is its bluntness. The grammar is unadorned, almost domestic, but it aims at a cultural habit Sontag spent a career diagnosing: the impulse to mediate experience through endless commentary and acquisition. Her suspicion of interpretive overproduction ("Against Interpretation") and her insistence on a more rigorous way of seeing ("On Photography") echo here. "Use what we have" can read as an aesthetic corrective: look harder before you explain; describe before you perform insight. It can also read as a political rebuke: liberal societies love to treat structural crises as a problem of insufficient resources rather than insufficient will.
Subtext: you're not under-equipped; you're distracted. The line cuts against consumerism's promise that salvation arrives in a box, and against intellectual culture's promise that salvation arrives in a framework. It flatters no one. It implies that the raw materials are present - language, images, bodies, institutions - and that the failure is a failure of application.
Sontag's era matters: postwar abundance, mass media saturation, the rising prestige of theory. Her sentence is a minimalist antidote to maximalist noise.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Sontag, Susan. (2026, January 16). What we need is to use what we have. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-need-is-to-use-what-we-have-102516/
Chicago Style
Sontag, Susan. "What we need is to use what we have." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-need-is-to-use-what-we-have-102516/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What we need is to use what we have." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-need-is-to-use-what-we-have-102516/. Accessed 19 Feb. 2026.






