"It is characteristic of the imagination to always consider itself to be at the end of an era. ... But the apocalyptic has always been there, in every era. ... It exists in every civilization. ... [I]n our time the apocalyptic can only be dealt with parodically. ... The apocalypse demands a lack of seriousness. ... Any crisis, after all, is just a projection of our existential anxiety. Perhaps our only privilege is to be alive and know we're all going to die together or separately. ... In the end ... the apocalyptic has a splendid fictional veneer, but it shouldn't be taken too seriously, because actually ... what it offers ... is the joyful, emphatic, and happy paradox of ... something to do in the future." —
Enrique Vila-Matas, Dublinesque