Can an obsessive fan - made supercut say
something about loneliness?
Questions promised for the talk: Can an obsessive fan - made supercut say
something about loneliness?
I've always wanted to do
something about loneliness.
Not exact matches
The passage just quoted has
something to say
about loneliness.
Education requires the cultivation of critique, or critical consciousness, and in my teenage high school years, being intelligent or able to conscript concepts into the service of sustained analysis was not
something that earned one a lot of attention with one's peers, and I was culturally shallow enough to want to be part of the popular crowd, so I would often hide my intellectual curiosity
about life, mostly during moments of grinding
loneliness.
Sometimes in our temporary
loneliness we find out
something about ourselves that we never would have discovered otherwise.
From
loneliness to collaboration, I ended up re-reading Cassavetes on Cassavetes (2001), a printed essay that was brought to my attention while curating a group exhibition, which, at its core, prompted the artists to question or evaluate their collaborative impulses.8 In the text, the director John Cassavetes writes plainly
about how he works with actors: «I just think that you give somebody
something they can do, and allow them to be a person.»
«There is
something haunting
about this doll — he has incredible dignity, yet expresses a sadness and a
loneliness that feels almost human.
There's
something bigger he is revealing
about loneliness, alienation — even while he points to a specific American socio - economic class.