From Virgin Education to Real Education Laudamiel, Christophe; Hornetz, Christoph; Mookherjee, Braja D. ...
Chemistry & biodiversity,
June 2008, Letnik:
5, Številka:
6
Journal Article
Recenzirano
The now famous virgin headspace experiment from late Braja D. Mookherjee and Subha Patel, and its use in the creation of scent ‘Virgin N° 1’ by Christophe Laudamiel and Christoph Hornetz for the ...novel by Patrick Süskind, and the movie by Tom Tykwer ‘Perfume – The Story of a Murderer’ (Constantin Film – Thierry Mugler Parfums – IFF, 2006) is discussed. Another fragrance from the luxury coffret, ‘Salon Rouge’, is described as well, illustrating how molecules and natural ingredients can be utilized, not only to create innovative or artistic fragrance compositions, but also to provide fundamental consumer education, improving the public image both of Chemistry and Perfumery.
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Whether it be Sir John Franklin confronting a "sense of his own horror" while hallucinating and dying in Flanagan's Wanting (177), Oblivia, mute and with no agency, possessed only of memories that ...Bella Donna "has chosen to tell her" in Wright's Swan Book (89) and ending her days in a ghost swamp (334), or Aljaz Cosini finding himself in a "gorge of death" because he has ignored the "language" of the landscape in Flanagan's Death of a River Guide (296-97), both authors write of an erosion of being and purpose, often using landscape and the history inscribed on that landscape to describe existential crisis. Magic realism, even its constituent words, has little relation with what Franz Roh proposed in his seminal 1925 essay on a new form of painting: the term has not only shifted its main focus from one artistic endeavor to another but has often features of surrealism or what Roh (dismissively) called "Expressionism," a term he used to explicitly label Marc Chagall's modernist work, characterized as including animals walking in the sky, heads "popped like corks," "chromatic storms," and distortions of perspective (Faris 17). Wright's dream of a common spirituality of reconciliation, also expressed in interview, also has resonances with Fuentes's belief (33) that all Mexicans need to recognize that Indians are intrinsically part of their culture, their identity and heritage, and must therefore work to ensure justice for that population. ...the invading colonial culture was initially penal, brutalizing, and authoritative and indeed sought to make the entire landscape an unescapable and perfect prison.
This article concentrates on the German to Finnish translation of terms used in the historical novel
by Patrick Süskind and translated by Markku Mannila. Specific terminology is an important part of ...the novel. It is full of terms of perfumery, botanical terms as well as terms referring to different kinds of technical equipment. When translating scientific texts the translations of the terms have to be as exact as possible, but have the translators of literary texts got to consult experts or specialists when searching for the correct terms? The target of the article is to examine LSP elements in a literary text and to analyze the techniques of translating scientific terms.
Patrick Süskind's Perfume chronicles Jean-Baptiste Grenouille's life from its ominous beginnings underneath a fish booth near the Cimetière des Innocents to its grotesque end in the same location, a ...haunting locus of infernal stench in eighteenth-century Paris. It is a story of raw brutality, rare intensity, and magic reality in which the protagonist's precarious position between olfactory prowess and lack of body odor motivates a string of despicable murders. The article correlates the protagonist's ontological crisis with the theme of the absent mother and brings to bear the feminist discourse on birthing and the womb in the trajectory of his life. Focusing on Kristeva's concepts of the Symbolic and the Semiotic and her notion of the chora, the article links the circumstances of Grenouille's birth, his seven-year sojourn in the cave, and the climactic closing of the cannibalistic feast, thus presenting new perspectives on the central events in the text.
One of the most celebrated younger writers in contemporary German literature, Patrick Suskind owes his fame mainly to his literary debut, the monodrama "Der Kontrabass," and to the novel "Das Parfum: ...Die Geschichte eines Morders."