Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Alan Bennett" ¶ 15
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

autobiographical and sketches
The second half of the book, " Personal Stories " ( subject to additions, removal and retitling in subsequent editions ), is made of AA members ' redemptive autobiographical sketches.
Mácha also authored a collection of autobiographical sketches titled Pictures From My Life, the 1835 – 36 novel Cikáni ( Gypsies ), and several individual poems, as well as a journal in which, among other things, he detailed his sexual encounters with Šomková.
Nevertheless, in October 2008, a book containing a sequence of autobiographical sketches was published entitled Clips from a Life.
The notebooks contain quotations that struck Lichtenberg, titles of books to read, autobiographical sketches, and short or long reflections.
Numerous part of Wotton appear in the biographical section of Sartor Resartus, in which Carlyle humorously sentences them to the bags containing Teufelsdröckh's autobiographical sketches, which the editor constantly complains about being overly fragmented or derivative of Goethe.
" " Over the following decade he wrote sketches and stories, and two autobiographical novellas, none of which was published in his lifetime.
This included autobiographical sketches, essays, and the critical verse ' deconstructions ' of De / Construct.
* After-images: autobiographical sketches ( 1999 )
Collection of short stories, vignettes, and autobiographical sketches.
Contributions of material and biographical or autobiographical sketches of members who have earned advancement within the Society, or who have made some outstanding contribution either within or outside the Society, shall be sought and published, for the edification of and stimulation of ideas among other members.

autobiographical and which
The somewhat Petrarchan love story which these poems suggest cannot obscure the fact that undoubtedly they have more than a little of autobiographical sincerity.
Whether in his forthcoming book C. P. Snow commits the errors of judgment and of fact with which your heavily autobiographical critic charged him is important.
The theme, which purports to be autobiographical, is that of rejected love.
There is an abundance of autobiographical information on Goldoni, most of which comes from the introductions to his plays and from his Memoirs.
According to some scholars, Howard's conception of Conan and the Hyborian Age may have originated in Thomas Bulfinch's The Outline of Mythology ( 1913 ) which inspired Howard to " coalesce into a coherent whole his literary aspirations and the strong physical, autobiographical elements underlying the creation of Conan.
In 1985, the British neo-progressive rock band Marillion achieved their only UK Number One album-and the best-selling album of their career-with Misplaced Childhood, a concept album featuring lyrics by frontman Fish which were partly autobiographical.
Contains an autobiographical afterword by C. L. Moore, and a biographical introduction by Del Rey, which is carefully noncommittal about the influence of her personal life on her writing.
Instead he believes his work, especially his earlier more autobiographical poems, are rooted in a changing country which echoes the Welshness of the past and the Anglicisation of the new industrial nation: " rural and urban, chapel-going and profane, Welsh and English, Unforgiving and deeply compassionate.
La Motte, her caretaker in the abbey, recognizes the heights to which her imagination reached after reading the autobiographical manuscripts of a past murdered man in the abbey.
Rousseau's autobiographical writings — his Confessions, which initiated the modern autobiography, and his Reveries of a Solitary Walker — exemplified the late 18th-century movement known as the Age of Sensibility, featuring an increasing focus on subjectivity and introspection that has characterized the modern age.
In his autobiographical essay, published in 1973 in Les Prix Nobel ( winners of the prizes are requested to provide such essays ), Lorenz credits his career to his parents, who " were supremely tolerant of my inordinate love for animals ," and to his childhood encounter with Selma Lagerlof's The Wonderful Adventures of Nils, which filled him with a great enthusiasm about wild geese.
It was followed by an autobiographical film, De unge år: Erik Nietzsche sagaen del 1 ( 2007 ), scripted by von Trier but directed by Jacob Thuesen, which tells the story of von Trier's years as a student at the National Film School of Denmark.
While in prison, he wrote at least four book-length manuscripts including a lyrical autobiographical novel, How It All Began, philosophical treatise Philosophical Arabesques, a collection of poems, and Socialism and Its Culture – all of which were found in Stalin's archive and published in the 1990s ).
My Truth was an autobiographical release for Robyn and included the tracks " Universal Woman " and " Giving You Back ," which explained her secret abortion.
He was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and clinical depression as a result of an evaluation conducted by psychoanalysts, and was treated with ECT on numerous occasions, which he himself talks about in his autobiographical book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.
She previously dated actor Owen Wilson ; her album C ' mon C ' mon ( 2002 ) featured the song " Safe and Sound ", which was dedicated to him and which, according to the album's liner notes, was an autobiographical account of their relationship.
* In My Country ( 2004 ), very loosely based on Country of My Skull, an autobiographical text by Antjie Krog which dealt with her coverage of the hearings, starring Samuel L. Jackson and Juliette Binoche
He had in 1798 – 99 started an autobiographical poem, which he never named but called the " poem to Coleridge ", which would serve as an appendix to The Recluse.
She appeared in a number of his films, including Darling Lili, 10, Victor Victoria and the autobiographical satire S. O. B., in which Andrews played a character who was a caricature of herself.
Psychiatrist Paulette Gillig draws a distinction between an " ego state " ( behaviors and experiences possessing permeable boundaries with other such states but united by a common sense of self ) and the term " alters " ( each of which may have a separate autobiographical memory, independent initiative and a sense of ownership over individual behavior ) commonly used in discussions of DID.
Much of his early life was portrayed in his autobiographical book, America America, which he made into a film in 1963.
She always made it clear that, whilst her life, which included a spell of severe mental illness, contributed to the themes contained within her work, she did not write explicitly autobiographical poetry.

autobiographical and form
He rated Alexander's work highly enough to base the character of the doctor who saves the protagonist in ' Eyeless in Gaza ' ( an experimental form of autobiographical work ) on F. M.
Brunton and his influence on the Masson family form the subject of Masson's autobiographical book My Father's Guru: A Journey Through Spirituality and Disillusion.
* A Voyage to Pagany ( 1928 )-An autobiographical travelogue in the form of a novel.
August Strindberg had pioneered this form with his autobiographical trilogy To Damascus.
* An autobiographical fiction in which the main character, by the last parts of the book, has written the first parts and is reading some form of it to an audience Shoplifting from American Apparel by Tao Lin
Jack London described oyster piracy in his autobiographical " alcoholic memoirs ", John Barleycorn, in the form of romanticized juvenile fiction in The Cruise of the Dazzler, and from the opposing point of view of the California Fish Patrol in " A Raid on the Oyster Pirates ," from Tales of the Fish Patrol.
It has been suggested that transitory mental constructions within episodic memory form a self-memory system that grounds the goals of the working self, but research upon those with amnesia find they have a coherent sense of self based upon preserved conceptual autobiographical knowledge, and semantic facts, and so conceptual knowledge rather than episodic memory.
Jacobs's autobiographical accounts were first published in serial form in the New York Tribune, a newspaper owned and edited by abolitionist Horace Greeley.
Semantic memory is memory for facts, episodic memory is autobiographical memory, procedural memory is memory for the performance of skills, priming is memory facilitated by prior exposure to a stimulus and working memory is a form or short term memory for information manipulation.
Antan d ' enfance, Chemin d ' école and À Bout d ' enfance form the autobiographical trilogy: Une enfance Créole.
In The Purely Pagan Sense ( 1976 ) is an autobiographical record of his homosexual life in England and pre-war Germany, discreetly written in the form of a novel.
In 1998, Magee published Confessions of a Philosopher, which essentially offers an introduction to philosophy in autobiographical form.
Author Lyman B. Hagen places Angelou in the long tradition of African American autobiography, but insists that she has created a unique interpretation of the autobiographical form.
Based on Mark Twain's 1872 autobiographical novel, this made-for-cable film is presented in flashback form, as aged humorist Mark Twain ( James Garner ) is invited as the keynote speaker for the Bryn Mawr College graduation ceremonies of 1891.
Autoethnography is a form of self-reflection and writing that explores the researcher's personal experience and connects this autobiographical story to wider cultural, political, and social meanings and understandings.
An autobiographical account of his 1933 trip to Africa, Hemingway presents the subject of big game hunting in a non-fiction form in Green Hills of Africa.
Cytowic describes how an article about his work on synesthesia in the tabloid The National Enquirer, which are " not known to help one's career " led to his first contacts with synesthetes beyond MW These personal accounts of synesthesia, described here in more autobiographical style, also form the basis of Cytowic's more detailed scientific book, Synesthesia: A Union of the Senses.
In an article in The Age newspaper, 20 February 2007, written after her death, literary critic, Peter Craven, was reported as saying, " She was a master of black comedy and she went on to write a wholly different form of autobiographical fiction that was lucid, luminous and calm ".
His travel experiences will often form the basis of a text, but they are then complemented, embroidered and expanded by the addition of scholarly analysis, quoted sections from other texts, autobiographical flashbacks, or even dream sections.
Most of Hackländer's very numerous works have remained unreprinted, but a handful have lasted into, or been revived in, more recent times, including: two collections of fairy stories, Der Leibschneider der Zwerge and Weihnachtsmärchen ; the travel book Reise in den Orient, as well as some pieces on the Rhine included with works by other authors in Rheinfahrt ; and two of the many autobiographical works, Handel und Wandel, which describes in lightly fictionalised form his dissatisfied early life as cheap labour in a small shop, and Friedrich Wilhelm Hackländer, ein Preusse in Schwaben, which deals with his experiences in Württemberg.
" Later, his work became more political, the best known examples being " Dead Silence in the Brain: The CIA Assassination of John Lennon " ( The Comics Journal Summer Special 2001 ); " Operation Northwoods " ( The Comics Journal Winter Special 2002 ); " 1963 ," an autobiographical account of growing up in the Dallas area during the Kennedy assassination, which appeared in Roadstrips ( Chronicle Books, 2006 ); and the aforementioned book The Bush Junta, in which White and 25 other cartoonists told the history of the George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush presidential administrations in comic strip form.

0.383 seconds.