this is A QUOTEtalii said:
I AM HANS MOLEMANtalii said:this is A QUOTE
hey that's an interesting idea yea, hannibal lecter, hansel and gretel too... i jsut finished reqading perfume by patrick suskind (recently made into a movie i think last year?) and it has some cannibalism (a little bit though and more to do with emphasising the desire to be closer to people aleit in a literal... i guess... way... ) mmclaudz3 said:I'm thinking "Cannibalism; popularised and idealised in the eyes of literature".
Questioning why society has such a profound interest in taboos such as cannibalism. I'm planning on using the Hannibal Lecter series, and other texts to back it up such as the bible and childrens stories eg Hansel and Gretal...thoughts?
Haha yes, i've read that, it's quite good. I've got to be all knowing though. Does it sound relevant to be interviewing an anthropologist? Or someone who's been to, like, New Guinea or somewhere still somewhat primative (I was thinking about that idiot reporter lady and that Wah Wah boy too?) I don't know....bleugh.stillwaters said:hey that's an interesting idea yea, hannibal lecter, hansel and gretel too... i jsut finished reqading perfume by patrick suskind (recently made into a movie i think last year?) and it has some cannibalism (a little bit though and more to do with emphasising the desire to be closer to people aleit in a literal... i guess... way... ) mm
Exactly what i was so very difficulty trying to sayI'm focusing mine on a philosophical/psychological paradigm of humanity, with the use of literature and cinematography as evidence. My first draft has been completed, however, it exudes a whole lot of 'nothingness', and have since returned to square one.
That doesn't sound that broad to start off with. Just Phrase your proposal as "Social archetypes and functions reflected by *Insert B-Man characters here*"I want it to have something to do with philosophy/psychology within certain films and film characters.
I had an idea along the lines of batman characters and the psychology behind their will-to-life (Arthur Schopenhauer) and how they reflect certain aspects of society.