Hamlet and the Snowman: Reflections on Vision and Meaning in Life and LiteratureP. Lang, 2000 - 134 Seiten In Hamlet and the Snowman, personal reflections of the author are joined with literary criticism in a common endeavor - a search to arrive at vision and meaning in life and literature. In the course of that effort, literary classics by Anderson, Shakespeare, Melville, Dostoyevsky, and Becket are analyzed, and the findings are evaluated within the framework of Newman's personal reflections. The search, taken step by step, slowly leads to those fundamental elements that make up one's vision of life and its meaning as well as recognition of their universality and similarities in both life and literature. |
Inhalt
Prologue | 1 |
About Questions and Strangeness | 3 |
The Snowman and His Friend | 7 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Bartleby bear become beginning believe belong better bring characters close comedy comes comic death Dostoyevsky's Estragon existence expect expression eyes face fact Falstaff fear feeling final followed fool give gone ground Hamlet hands happen heart hold hope human keep kind king knew known later lawyer leave less light lines listen literature living look mankind master meaning Melville mind moment moments moving narrator ness never Nippers Notes ordinary past Pause perhaps person play Polonius prefer questions reach reason remain scene seems sense separation Shakespeare side silences simply snowman someone soon soul sound speak stage standing story strange tale tell thing thou thought tion truly trust truth trying turn underground vision Vladimir waiting wall wish wonder