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"Chronology, Historical Fiction."
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Sapiens : a graphic history. Volume three, The masters of history
by
Harari, Yuval N., author
,
Vandermeulen, David, 1968- author, artist
,
Casanave, Daniel, author, artist
in
Civilization History Fiction.
,
Civilization History Comic books, strips, etc.
,
Human beings History Fiction.
2024
\"Sometimes history seems like a laundry list of malevolent monarchs, pompous presidents and dastardly dictators. But are they really the ones in the driving seat? Sapiens: A Graphic History-The Masters of History takes us on an immersive and hilarious ride through the human past to discover the forces that change our world, bring us together, and just as often... tear us apart. Grab a front-row seat to the greatest show on earth, and explore the rise of money, religion and empire. Join our fabulous host Heroda Tush, as she wonders: Which historical superhero will display the power to make civilizations rise and fall? Will Mr. Random prove that luck and circumstance prevail? Will Lady Empire convince us of the irrefutable shaping force of conquerors? Or will Clashwoman beat them all to greatness by reminding us of the endless confrontations that seem to forever plague our species?\"-- Provided by publisher.
Disorderly Narratives: The Order of Narration
2017,2015,2016
… il était né en 1920 à Anvers, et il avait à peine connu son père … Après quelques années d’études à Bruxelles, il quitta la Belgique pour Paris en 1938 … Il fit la connaissance de Robert Capa. Celui-ci l'entraîna, en janvier 1939, à Barcelone …Chien de printemps, p. 25Modiano's novels are full of dates. The narrators seem to take much pleasure in specifying precisely when certain events took place, whether in their own lives or in someone else's. Chapters and paragraphs frequently start with a date reference: ‘Hier, 1er octobre de dix-neuf cent quatre-vingt quatorze, je suis revenu chez moi, de la place d'Italie, par le métro.’ Or: ‘J'ai connu Francis Jansen quand j'avais dix-neuf ans, au printemps de 1964 …’ These are especially useful given that Modiano's novels all deal with explorations into the past, various levels of the past, made accessible through long flashbacks. The typical Modiano narrative generally works on three or more of these ‘levels’: the narrative of Fleurs de ruine, for instance, moves back and forth between a pre-war period (1933), the narrator's post-war childhood, and the tale of his late adolescence in the early 1960s.Yet a reading of a Modiano novel leaves the reader with the overall impression that chronology, although definitely there, is curiously redundant. In Voyage de noces, for example, 1942 presents itself to the reader as a past no further away than the more recent level of 1968; it does not feel more distant. It is as if the different chronological levels are situated on a single plane, on which they enjoy an unhierarchical and interdependent existence. This impression of redundant chronology is not an obvious one, unlike the experimental subversion of conventional time that occurs in certain nouveaux romans. The subversion, if that is what it is, is far more discreet, as it occurs within the framework of a conventional dating system. How can we account for this unusual representation of time, simultaneously absent and present, in Modiano's novels?NARRATIVE ORDERThe order in which events are told in a narrative is clearly crucial to the sense of time which governs it, but this is dependent on what kind of narrative is under discussion. Various narrative theorists have pointed out that two, or even three very different objects coexist within a single narrative.
Book Chapter
Disorderly Narratives
2000
Modiano’s novels are full of dates. The narrators seem to take much pleasure in specifying precisely when certain events took place, whether in their own lives or in someone else’s. Chapters and paragraphs frequently start with a date reference: ‘Hier, 1er octobre de dix-neuf cent quatre-vingt quatorze, je suis revenu chez moi, de la place d’Italie, par le mètro.’¹ Or: ‘J’ai connu Francis Jansen quand j’avais dix-neuf ans, au printemps de 1964 . . .’² These are especially useful given that Modiano’s novels all deal with explorations into the past, various levels of the past, made accessible through long flashbacks.
Book Chapter