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Puterea cunoasterii

Puterea cunoasterii

6.0 / 10 (2 voturi)
NaN
Limba:
Romana
Data publicarii:
2019
Editura:
Tip coperta:
Paperback
Nr. pagini:
191
Colectie:
ISBN:
2000001124970
Dimensiuni: l: 13cm | H: 20cm

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Descriere

Cartea ,,Puterea cunoasterii" semnata atat de simplu, Joan, apartine unui autor sfios, modest, cu ,,frica lui Dumnezeu in san", dupa cum sugestiv il apreciaza "Maria sa, poporul". Autorul este un om care a reusit in viata uzand de intelepciune si credinta in Dumnezeu. Tocmai gratie acestui succes, sfaturile sale sunt credibile. S-au calit in focul experientei. Cunoasterea este secretul izbanzii, ne spune Ioan inca din primele pagini ale scrierii sale.

Recenzii și comentarii

The Tendency Toward Violence and Oppression in Revolutionaries Nota 10

de Marina-Cristiana Stan | 26/09/2019 15:31

Throughout the novel, Dickens approaches his historical subject with some ambivalence. While he supports the revolutionary cause, he often points to the evil of the revolutionaries themselves. Dickens deeply sympathizes with the plight of the French peasantry and emphasizes their need for liberation. The several chapters that deal with the Marquis Evrémonde successfully paint a picture of a vicious aristocracy that shamelessly exploits and oppresses the nation’s poor. Although Dickens condemns this oppression, however, he also condemns the peasants’ strategies in overcoming it. For in fighting cruelty with cruelty, the peasants effect no true revolution; rather, they only perpetuate the violence that they themselves have suffered. Dickens makes his stance clear in his suspicious and cautionary depictions of the mobs. The scenes in which the people sharpen their weapons at the grindstone and dance the grisly Carmagnole come across as deeply macabre. Dickens’s most concise and relevant view of revolution comes in the final chapter, in which he notes the slippery slope down from the oppressed to the oppressor: “Sow the same seed of rapacious license and oppression over again, and it will surely yield the same fruit according to its kind.” Though Dickens sees the French Revolution as a great symbol of transformation and resurrection, he emphasizes that its violent means were ultimately antithetical to its end.

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