Literary Quotes: Claude McKay

โ€œIf a man is not faithful to his own individuality, he cannot be loyal to anything.โ€ โ€“ Claude McKay

Todayโ€™s quote is from the poet and Harlem Renaissance contemporary Claude McKay. I thought I would share it because it speaks volumes of the writing world while also transcending into a lesson about individuality and self-reliance.

Interpretation

When we look at this quote through the lens of writing, it says a lot, because we often look at writing as voice and as tone, which is synonymous with individuality in writing. A writer must be an individual (we are told) in order to stake their claim in the world of greatness, because having a singular voice matters. While I donโ€™t think it has to be that grandiose an idea, individuality certainly means that we have to think for ourselves and do things that are sometimes self-motivated in order to get writing done.

Take this blog for instance.

I think itโ€™s traveled some distance from when I plopped down in my computer chair and wrote the first post. Not far. But it has come some distance. This was all due to the individuality and loyalty that I have steeped myself in to complete a writing goal that Iโ€™ve wanted to complete for years now, which is to write a lot on a given subject for a sustained length of time (in this caseโ€”over a year).

We have to be loyal to ourselves to write things that are both interesting and speak to our personality and individuality. As such, I think Claude McKay is saying: we canโ€™t be individuals and disloyal at the same time, because if thatโ€™s true, then we are negligent followers who cannot speak truth to their own convictions.

And, as writers, we simply can’t have that.


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