Recherche multi-critères
Liste des résultats
Il y a 4 éléments qui correspondent à vos termes de recherche.-
There and back: Circularity in Jane Campion’s The Piano (1993)
par Annalena Geisler, Arthur Dussart, publié le 11/05/2023
-
The commercial and critical success of Jane Campion’s third feature-length film The Piano (1993) paired with the accolades it received (three Academy Awards, a César and the first Palme d’Or for a female director) cemented the reputation of the New Zealand director. The Piano is a period drama set in the beginning of the 19th century which centres on the mute Scottish woman Ada McGrath who, together with her daughter and her piano, travels to New Zealand to be married to a frontiersman.
-
The Travelers, Regina Porter (2019)
par Jillian Bruns, publié le 23/02/2021
-
Fiche de lecture du roman "The Travelers" de Regina Porter.
-
Gulliver's Travels (Jonathan Swift)
par ENS Lyon La Clé des Langues, publié le 21/11/2014
-
Travel books were very fashionable in the eighteenth century. Real travelers sometimes included elements of fiction in their accounts of their wanderings to make them sound more exotic and interesting. In Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift makes fun of this literary genre by introducing a fictitious traveler, Gulliver, who tells us about his encounters with strange creatures and countries. Gulliver's first person narrative is introduced by a fake publisher's note which is also written in the first person...
-
Narration in the Human Mind
par Siri Hustvedt, publié le 16/02/2012
-
"Human beings are forever explaining themselves to themselves. This is the nature of our self-consciousness. We are not only awake and aware of the world around us, but are able to reflect on ourselves as actors in that world. We reason and we tell stories. Unlike our mammalian relatives who do not narrate their own lives, we become characters in our own tales, both when we recollect ourselves in the past and imagine ourselves in the future. Our ability to represent our experience in language - in those sounds and signs of our essential intersubjectivity - allows us the necessary symbolic alienation required for mental time travel..."