Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, «In the beginning...»: A Catholic
Understanding of the Story of Creation and the Fall, (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1995) ix.
An excellent project and scheme of work for year 8 where students learn a number of skills but also learn about the Art movements and gain a
deeper understanding of the story and history of Art.
It's not that everything is abstract, but certain revelations flip a basic
understanding of the story upside down, and past that, everything is thrown into a surging black hole and you are left to question what it means exist and be you.
The shad, like the Concord farmers, have, as he says, a «just cause,» and when he asks what might avail a crowbar against the Billerica Dam, he is pointing, by means of a parable, to a radically
new understanding of the story of human existence.
Kids will have a better
understanding of the story when they go through the illustrations and they will also get to know the emotions and facial expressions of the characters just by a simple glance.
A well - developed Midpoint will twist reader
understanding of the story by more strongly hinting at the changes, growth, and obstacles the protagonist will need to overcome.
Every beat of mental and physical anguish that Margot Robbie nails with her pitch - perfect portrayal of Tonya Harding, brings the audience to an
intimate understanding of story misstated and mishandled by the media and by the judge who oversaw Harding's case related to a brutal attack against fellow figure skater Nancy Kerrigan by Shane Stint (Ricky Russert).
It is a cyclical film (beginning and ending with the founding of a town) with archetypal characters (father / son aggressions, mother / daughter deceptions), and it is told like Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge, through image and an almost
instinctual understanding of the stories inherently related by a time and a place.
Fan fiction on the internet is the manifestation of a hybrid, more fluid and
nuanced understanding of story and storytelling: drawing on oral storytelling traditions, and is both performative and written.
Perhaps part of the reason that manga is thought of in this way is that there just aren't very many opportunities to get one complete story from a property in a periodical magazine like «Weekly Shonen Jump», which is usually just comprised of short chapters of a larger running narrative that is usually impenetrable without at least a surface
level understanding of the story so far, or at least the most recent major events.
Just getting to the end of the game will not provide you with an
explicit understanding of the story; those who would like to learn about Transistor «s setting and characters will have to do some digging.
Despite it's lack of heavy expository dialogue and straightforward cutscenes like most linear games, Transistor takes a far more subtle approach, which gives players a more
satisfying understanding of the story and the world by the end, even though so much of it is inferred.
One of the great things about Dark Souls was the ambiguity, the mystery behind the lore and the opportunity to search out information if you wanted, ignore if you didn't and then use it all to determine your
own understanding of the story compared to others».
Fortunately, Feral Fury is a game that doesn't require a
full understanding of the story, which is great, as after the already limited opening cut - scene there isn't much more in the way of story going forward.
Overall, readers found the story to be deeply affecting and gripping: A book that teaches about other peoples frailties and differences and leads to a
better understanding of their story is one that stays with me.
Your kid will learn valuable skills including comprehension, vocabulary and
an understanding of story structure (that stories have a beginning, middle and end).
At the same time, e-books often come with extras like sound effects and videos that can be distracting, potentially messing with the child's attention and
understanding of the story or the task or the lesson they're supposed to be learning.
This is a relatively faithful, period adaptation of John le Carré's novel, yet thanks to Alfredson's
understanding of story and period, it still feels like a proper movie.
That may not be true literally, but a lot of the segments run together and don't add to
our understanding of the story or characters.
According to Pat Crowley, an essential ingredient to making this all work was
the understanding of the story between Bayona and Trevorrow.
And we were so lucky to have Neil Burger driving this — his vision of the world, the amazing details and subtleties of it,
his understanding of the story, and how seriously he took every part of it... I mean, you can tell.
The confessional documentary style works in this film to enrich the characters and deepen
our understanding of the story behind Tonya Harding.