e ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey

Перевод: existentialist speek existentialist


[прилагательное]
экзистенциалистский;
[существительное]
экзистенциалист


Тезаурус:

  1. John Fowles, a student of French literature while at university, talks in The French Lieutenant's Woman of "the lessons of existentialist philosophy" (Fowles 1969 and 1977: 63) and of working in "the age of Alain Robbe-Grillet and Roland Barthes the theoreticians of the nouveau roman " (p. 188).
  2. Frisch is not exactly an existentialist, but his book is shot through with a certain emotionally short-circuiting ennui, a weary horror that life is nothing but a random yet poignant series of coincidences.
  3. This was immediately prior to the Nicholson "star" era; the wave of which he rode the crest was beginning to build and it is interesting to chronicle for a moment some of the events leading up to his "discovery" as a major Hollywood personality - a hero of the age and one who, as we have seen, was much influenced by the existentialist prophecies of Kerouac, which were now, finally, coming home to roost in middle-class America and elsewhere.
  4. THE abiding fascination of the existentialist years in post-war Paris may depend on myth.
  5. Although I have so far been concentrating on Thomist interpretations of existence, there have been equally profound examinations in Buddhist and Moslem tradition, and in the modern day by existentialist writers, some of whom are religious and some of whom are not.
  6. The "meaning" theist, on the other hand, may sometimes claim to need too little - as in the case of the existentialist approach outlined in the last section.
  7. Nicholson's own idea was, in fact, to write the first existentialist cowboy story, which was something of a departure from the current genre; he was surely right in his assumption that Corman might not see the potential, if such existed.
  8. In much existentialist writing the impression is given that, in order to test the believer and evoke real trust, God makes a world in which all the evidence points against Him.
  9. Thus, classical structuralism, with its cold, formal impersonality, occurs as a reaction to the 1940s existentialist emphasis on the individual ego; and becomes itself overturned or deconstructed by poststructuralist "playfulness".
  10. It is a position often linked to existentialist religious writers and particularly to the Danish thinker of the early nineteenth century, often regarded as the founding father of existentialism, Sren Kierkegaard.
  11. Certainly the foreign mystery of the Inca - part of it feminine - stirs Pizarro's bluff existentialist heart, but the play and production defines it too readily in familiar terms.
  12. historical, biographical, rhetorical, mythical, Freudian, jungian, existentialist, Marxist, structuralist, Christian-allegorical, ethical, exponential, linguistic, phenomenological, archetypal, you name it; so that when each commentary was written there would be simply nothing further to say about the novel in question.
  13. Pechorin is a cold-hearted, stylish fatalist, experimentalist, existentialist and divided man, a traveller, gambler, heart-breaker and forgetter of old friends, who loves to ride "a spirited horse through the long grass against a desert wind".

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru