Twin Peaks Characters Drawn In The Style Of The Simpsons by Belgian artist Adrien Noterdaem.
Futures & Pasts: Wild Things by Nick Pinkerton:
“In Pierre Bayard’s 1998 Who Killed Roger Ackroyd?: The Mystery Behind the Agatha Christie Mystery, a closer-than-close reading of Agatha Christie’s 1926 The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, psychoanalyst and literature professor Bayard expends considerable space on the subject of the book’s narrative ellipses, its lies by omission. These are the spaces in which Christie’s narrator, Dr. James Sheppard, who is eventually unmasked as the book’s murderer, can conceal his guilt. They are also, for Bayard, indicators of a far larger world which exists beyond the parsimonious few details that Christie, by way of Sheppard and investigator Hercule Poirot, have chosen to share with the reader.” - Keynote: The multi-level stereotypes of The Cabin In The Woods by Tasha Robinson: - “Stereotypes are a real time-saver.
Futures & Pasts: Wild Things by Nick Pinkerton:
“In Pierre Bayard’s 1998 Who Killed Roger Ackroyd?: The Mystery Behind the Agatha Christie Mystery, a closer-than-close reading of Agatha Christie’s 1926 The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, psychoanalyst and literature professor Bayard expends considerable space on the subject of the book’s narrative ellipses, its lies by omission. These are the spaces in which Christie’s narrator, Dr. James Sheppard, who is eventually unmasked as the book’s murderer, can conceal his guilt. They are also, for Bayard, indicators of a far larger world which exists beyond the parsimonious few details that Christie, by way of Sheppard and investigator Hercule Poirot, have chosen to share with the reader.” - Keynote: The multi-level stereotypes of The Cabin In The Woods by Tasha Robinson: - “Stereotypes are a real time-saver.
- 4/1/2014
- by Ricky
- SoundOnSight
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