vendredi 11 avril 2008
Day of the Locust
The Day of the Locust is a 1939 novel by American author Nathanael West...Movie too 1975
mardi 8 avril 2008
mardi 1 avril 2008
Vampire de Paris...
dimanche 23 mars 2008
Suvorov cite dans le Brise Glace
Stefan Szende "The promise Hitler kept"
Maïski "Qui a aidé Hitler?"
Des recherches sur le premier donne des résultats assez surprenant sur Interet !
Sur Maïsky, un prof d'université prépare la publication de son journal : Gabriel Gorodetsky. A également écrit "le grand jeu des dupes" : un essai critique du Brise Glace...A voir
Egalement ca : Maisky, I. M., Memoirs of a Soviet Ambassador : The War, 1939-1943, New York, 1968
Maïski "Qui a aidé Hitler?"
Des recherches sur le premier donne des résultats assez surprenant sur Interet !
Sur Maïsky, un prof d'université prépare la publication de son journal : Gabriel Gorodetsky. A également écrit "le grand jeu des dupes" : un essai critique du Brise Glace...A voir
Egalement ca : Maisky, I. M., Memoirs of a Soviet Ambassador : The War, 1939-1943, New York, 1968
mercredi 19 mars 2008
Werner WOLFF Island of death
Trouvé une ref à ce livre aujourd'hui sur internet. C'est une thèse de 1948 sur l'île de Pâques...Le titre complet est le suivant : Island of Death: A New Key to Easter Island's Culture Through an Ethno Psychological Study
Lire extrait d'un article de l'époque (15 Nov 1948) dans le Times :
In a new book, Island of Death (J. J. Augustin; $7), Dr. Werner Wolff, professor of psychology at Bard College, N.Y., tackles the problem with a "psychological" approach. There is plenty of scattered information about Easter Island, says Dr. Wolff. Why not fit the pieces together and use psychological insight to reconstruct the island's ancient culture? Then the mystery of the statues might be solved.
Laboriously and learnedly, Dr. Wolff assembles his data. Quoting many languages (including several kinds of Polynesian), he describes the Easter Islanders as they appeared to early explorers. They were rather good-looking people, but by modern standards they were not nice. For one thing, they ate one another—enemies, friends, relatives "and neighbors—with gusto. Parents ate their children; children ate their fathers.
Pour lire l'article complet, rendez vous à : http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,853423,00.html?iid=chix-sphere
Pas trouvé de biographie, pour l'instant...
Lire extrait d'un article de l'époque (15 Nov 1948) dans le Times :
In a new book, Island of Death (J. J. Augustin; $7), Dr. Werner Wolff, professor of psychology at Bard College, N.Y., tackles the problem with a "psychological" approach. There is plenty of scattered information about Easter Island, says Dr. Wolff. Why not fit the pieces together and use psychological insight to reconstruct the island's ancient culture? Then the mystery of the statues might be solved.
Laboriously and learnedly, Dr. Wolff assembles his data. Quoting many languages (including several kinds of Polynesian), he describes the Easter Islanders as they appeared to early explorers. They were rather good-looking people, but by modern standards they were not nice. For one thing, they ate one another—enemies, friends, relatives "and neighbors—with gusto. Parents ate their children; children ate their fathers.
Pour lire l'article complet, rendez vous à : http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,853423,00.html?iid=chix-sphere
Pas trouvé de biographie, pour l'instant...
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