Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 14 de set. de 2009 · Description of a Struggle ends with a shot of a girl of approximately the same age as the state of Israel, “the girl that will never be Anne Frank”, drawing in an art class. The girl’s presence, and her precise movements, evoke the serenity of a child who could have absorbed the traumatic experiences of her family and people, a sense of responsibility that stems from one’s awareness of ...

  2. Summary. "Description of a Struggle" is divided into three distinct parts. In the first part, the narrator is at a party when he and someone he refers to as only his "acquaintance" decide to leave to go for a walk "up the Laurenziberg," a hill in Prague. It is very cold and snowing so the walk seems ill-advised, but the two set out on it anyway.

  3. I bought a short story collection of Kafka's because I had previously read and enjoyed The Trial and The Castle. The first story I read was Description of a Struggle. Is this story supposed to be confusing as all fuck or am I missing something? His novels aren't nearly as hard to read as this story was. It's an early series of fragments, so ...

  4. Full Description. A young boy joyfully rides a pushcart down the hilly streets of Haifa, a humped camel crosses a street, and an innocent girl paints an unseen picture in what may best represent the emergence of a new country and its unknown future. These are the arresting images captured by internationally acclaimed filmmaker Chris Marker (La ...

  5. After the Six Day War radically changed the course of Israel and the entire Middle East, Marker withdrew Description of a Struggle, and it has remained largely unavailable until the recent restoration by the Jerusalem Film Archive. Followed by. La Jetée. Directed by Chris Marker. With Hélène Chatelain, Davos Hanich, Jacques Ledoux.

  6. 内容简介 · · · · · ·. Description of a Struggle is a three-part story written by Franz Kafka between 1903 and 1907. It constitutes his oldest surviving work and was only published after his death. The first and third sections describe Prague society- and night-life from the point of view of the author and his acquaintance.

  7. expectation of the beast, and the decisive struggle in which the hero succumbs"; though there is poignance in this -- "the beast" was Kafka's nickname for his disease, to which he was to succumb within a few months -- we are glad to leave the burrowing hero, fussily timorous and blithely carnivorous, where he is, apprehensively poised