Ziad Shihab

Showing all posts tagged "Borges"

Ange Mlinko - His Eyes - Her Voice

An unnamed​ man and woman come together, slowly and arduously, over the course of a novel. She is a poet who has turned mute; he is a language teacher going blind. Her first bout of muteness, which struck when she was a teenager, was cured suddenly in French class by a single word: ‘bibliothèque’. Now she is attending classes in Ancient Greek to see if something in the language can dislodge her mysterious impediment. ‘She is almost entirely uninterested in the literature of Homer, Plato and H...

CITIZEN KANE: T for Technique and T for Tragedy

Citizen Kane is the greatest movie ever made, but it’s not the greatest movie Orson Welles ever made. In his lifetime, he described the movie as a millstone around his neck. No one could ever appreciate anything else he made because it was always held to that impossible standard. With some distance and critical reappraisal behind us, now we can see that he never really failed to live up to the promise of Citizen Kane. If anything, he surpassed it. Kane reinvented filmmaking, but it looks down...

Painting Borges

Painting Borges A provocative examination of the artistic interpretation of twelve of Borges’s most famous stories.In this groundbreaking book, Jorge J. E. Gracia explores the artistic interpretation of fiction from a philosophical perspective. Focusing on the work of Jorge Luis Borges, one of the most celebrated literary figures of Latin America, Gracia offers original interpretations of twelve of Borges’s most famous stories about identity and memory, freedom and destiny, and f...

Stories Strangely Told: Borges, Bad Art, and the Infinite Aleph

About Advertise » Contribute » Essays » Book Reviews Interviews Journal Go to... Home  »  Series   »   Stories Strangely Told: Borges, Bad Art, and the Infinite Aleph Stories Strangely Told: Borges, Bad Art, and the Infinite Aleph Author: Mark Hengstler | Mar142017 Posted in Series No comments Stories Stran...