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The Barbarian Invasions Reviews

  • Anais 2022-09-02 14:01:17

    brutal invasion

    Perhaps what moved me was the gratitude that everyone thought was perfect and beautiful after trying to make up for the twisted family relationship, and it showed that the tolerance and nostalgia between close relatives are extremely beautiful. A divided family does not allow People feel sad, a...

  • Johnny 2022-06-15 22:12:55

    it is a pleasure to meet you

    Is the poster a little absurd? Barbaric, savage and uncivilized, standing on the opposite side of civilization. A brutal invasion, literally, is not a good thing. The concept is fixed, people subconsciously, are accustomed to regard "new" as beautiful, advanced, and closer to civilization; "old"...

  • Kurt 2022-06-15 16:58:53

    vanishing savages

    Milan Kundera wrote in "The Unbearable Lightness of Life": The hatred of Hitler finally faded away, which exposed the profound moral degeneration of a world. I think what he meant was by no means only Nazis, or even mainly Nazis, but the former Soviet Union, which produced countless exiles,...

  • Ernestine 2022-06-15 16:48:57

    give me a little more tenderness

    Some of the experiences I have written on and off over the past year, followed by some memorable quotes in the original French language, most of the historical allusions are there, and a small amount of evaluation and explanation for each. ************************************ Another look at Les...

  • Monique 2022-06-15 16:14:16

    Symbiosis

    An old dying man, an intellectual who was once romantic, faced death in the most intellectual way in the last days of his life. This is a better ending. When my father, a history professor, was sitting outside the house with his old friends, he chatted about various doctrines, concepts, viewpoints,...

  • Angus 2022-06-15 16:04:19

    didn't understand

    "We've all done it, from separatist, independent, sovereign, sovereign-cum-corporatist"

    "We went from Existential Enlightenment, to Sartre, Camus, to Anticolonial after Fanon"