Michel Tournier, Vendredi, Ou, Les Limbes Du PacifiqueUniversity of Glasgow French and German Publications, 1992 - 89 Seiten |
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Seite 19
... fact . This complicity between the reader and the narrator becomes particularly important when elements of the fantastic are introduced into the text and the guidance of the narrator is withdrawn ( see below ) . References to the future ...
... fact . This complicity between the reader and the narrator becomes particularly important when elements of the fantastic are introduced into the text and the guidance of the narrator is withdrawn ( see below ) . References to the future ...
Seite 21
... fact be detonated not by the ' sovereign ' , but by his serf and one and only inhabitant of his kingdom , Vendredi . Similar irony can be detected elsewhere in the text , for example when Robinson discovers a footprint embedded in the ...
... fact be detonated not by the ' sovereign ' , but by his serf and one and only inhabitant of his kingdom , Vendredi . Similar irony can be detected elsewhere in the text , for example when Robinson discovers a footprint embedded in the ...
Seite 68
... fact remains that by the close of the text it is two white , Western characters who remain on the island . In response to a reader asking him why he had not dedicated Vendredi to Defoe , Tournier confided that he had , in fact , had ...
... fact remains that by the close of the text it is two white , Western characters who remain on the island . In response to a reader asking him why he had not dedicated Vendredi to Defoe , Tournier confided that he had , in fact , had ...
Inhalt
Chapter Two Points of View | 14 |
Chapter Three Spiritual Worlds | 27 |
Chapter Four Sexual Relations | 42 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept apparently arrival aspect associated assumes attempts aware becomes beginning body c'est castaway Chapter character Christian claims close comes consider course Defoe's described desire earth elements emphasis entry environment established example existence experience eyes fact female final forces Friday further Holy homme human important incident initially interpretation island knowledge l'île linked lives log-book marked means models myth narrative narrator natural novel object Once period physical plant point of view positive present qu'il Quaker reader reading refers reflect relations relationship remains represents revealed Robinson Crusoe role seeks seems seen Selkirk sense sexe sexual ship significance society solitude Speranza spiritual stage story structural suggest things third thought threatening Tournier tree turns values Vendredi vision Western