This page will contain discussion groups about Bunny, as they become available.BunnyBunny may refer to:
Fictional rabbits
Inanimate rabbits
Rabbit-derived terms
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Bunny may refer to:. Céline's writing is often hyper-real and its polemic qualities can often be startling, however his main strength lies in his ability to discredit almost everything and yet not lose a sense of enraged humanity. Playboy Bunny. His writings are examples of black comedy, where misfortunate and often terrible things are described humourously. Fluffy bunny. In Conversations with Professor Y (1955) Céline defends his style, indicating that his heavy use of the ellipse and his disjointed sentences are an attempt to embody human emotion in written language. Chubby bunny. He continued writing right up to his death in 1961, finishing his last novel, Rigodon, in fact on the day before he died of a brain aneurysm. Bunny suit. A progressive disintegration of personality appears in the stylistic incoherence of his books based on his life during the war: Guignol's Band, D'un château l'autre and Nord. However, some critics claim that the books are less incoherent than intentionally fragmented, and that they represent the final development of the style introduced with Journey to the End of the Night, his first novel, suggesting that Céline maintained his faculties in clear working order to the end of his days. Bunny hug. However if one wishes to say this then it must be qualified by the narrative of betrayal and exploitation, both real and imagined, that punctuated his life, for his two true loves, his cat and wife, are mentioned with nothing other than kindness and warmth. Bunny hop. Céline was unable to communicate with others, and during his life sank more deeply into a hate-filled world of madness and rage. The Microsoft Bunny. Pessimism pervades Céline's fiction as his characters sense failure, anxiety, nihilism, and inertia. The Stanford Bunny, a standard image-processing dataset. Céline's importance as an innovative author has been recognized, although many find his anti-semitism distateful. Pat the Bunny. Céline died on July 1, 1961 of a ruptured aneurysm and was interred in a small cemetery at Bas Meudon (part of Meudon in the Hauts-de-Seine département). It's Happy Bunny. Fame came back to him in later life with a trilogy telling of his exile: D'un château l'autre, Nord and Rigodon. Fillerbunny. Amnestied, he returned to France in 1951; unable to earn a living through medicine, and facing difficulty returning his books to print, he lived in poverty, working himself to death on his writing. The Energizer Bunny . Branded a collaborator, he was condemned by default (1950) in France to one year of imprisonment and declared a national disgrace. Bugs Bunny. He escaped judgment by fleeing to Germany (Sigmaringen, 1944) along with the Vichy government and later to Denmark (1945). Bionic Bunny. Openly anti-semitic before and during World War II, he was identified by the public with the Nazi occupation, despite his consistent contempt for their ideology (and all others). Babs and Buster Bunny. In 1936 he wrote Mort à crédit (Death on the Installment Plan), giving innovative, chaotic, and antiheroic visions of human suffering. Bunny (webcomic). The book became a public success, but Céline was not awarded the Prix Goncourt, although the voting was controversial enough to become the subject of a book (Goncourt 32 by Eugène Saccomano, 1999). Greg the Bunny, 2002 television show. It broke many literary conventions of the time, using the rhythms and, to a certain extent, the vocabulary of slang and vulgar speech. John Bunny (1862–1915), silent film comedian. His best-known work is also his first: Voyage au bout de la nuit (Journey to the End of the Night) (1932, translated into English most recently and successfully by Ralph Manheim). Bunny, Nottinghamshire, England. He then started to write in his spare time. Raffles. Next he worked in Africa and for the new League of Nations before taking up a permanent position as a doctor to the poor in Paris. See A.J. He worked in France as a doctor, then travelled to the United States where he became the staff surgeon at the Ford Motor Company plant in Detroit, Michigan. Bunny, the sidekick of Raffles. Discharged from the Army, after the war he studied to obtain a medical degree. The Blue Bunny ice cream company. He fought in World War I and was decorated for his actions in a battle where he was allegedly wounded in the head. Bunny Watson, a Canadian radio show. Céline received only a basic education before he joined the French cavalry. Glow Bunny. He was born Louis-Ferdinand Destouches at Courbevoie in the Seine département (now Hauts-de-Seine). The Easter bunny. . Rabbit
"Bunny" Wright, Canadian mystery novelist. Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890 edited by Philip Rees (1991, ISBN 0130893013). R. Hindus (1950). L. The Crippled Giant by M. Bunny, a character in the sci-fi TV show LEXX. by Jesse Browner (1992).. Bunny Brunel, American musician. Céline: A Biography by Frédéric Vitoux, trans. Ethelene "Bunny" Debarge (born 1955), part of the R&B musical group Debarge. Thomas (1980). Bunny Wailer (Neville Livingston) (born 1947), American musician. Louis-Ferdinand Céline by M. Bunny Lee (born 1941), Jamaican record producer. Céline and his Vision by Erika Ostrovsky (1967). Bunny Berigan (1908–1942), American jazz trumpeter. Céline: Man of Hate by Bettina Knapp (1974). Henry "Bunny" Austin (1906–2000), British tennis player. Hewitt (1987). John "Bunny" Breckinridge (1903–1996), entertainer and eccentric. The Golden Age of Louis-Ferdinand Céline by N. Bunny Ahearne (1900–1985), British ice hockey promoter. Carson (1989). An English given name for males or females
Reading Louis-Ferdinand Céline by Jim Knipfel. Rigodon, published posthumously in 1969. Guignol's band II (Le pont de Londres) 1964. Nord, 1960 (North, 1972). D'un château l'autre, 1957 (Castle to Castle, 1968). Normance (Féerie II) 1954. Féerie pour une autre fois 1952. Casse-pipe 1949. Guignol's Band, 1944 (English translation 1954). "les Beaux Draps", 1941. "l'École des cadavres", 1938. Bagatelle pour un massacre, 1937. "Mea culpa", 1936. Mort à crédit, 1936 (Death on the Installment Plan aka Death on Credit (UK), 1938). Voyage au bout de la nuit, 1932 (Journey to the End of the Night, 1943). Semmelweis,1924. |