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Journey to the End of the Night (French: Voyage au bout de la nuit, 1932) is the first novel by Louis-Ferdinand Céline.This semi-autobiographical work follows the adventures of Ferdinand Bardamu in World War I, colonial Africa, the United States and the poor suburbs of Paris where he works as a doctor.
On the night that they have scheduled a negotiation to sell the contents of the suitcase to African buyers, their go-between dies while having sex with a trans woman named Nazda. In desperation, Sinatra makes a deal with the Nigerian dishwasher of the brothel, Wemba, who is to travel to the harbor of Santos, taking the place of the go-between ...
Journey to the End of the Night (French: Voyage au bout de la nuit) is the first novel of Louis-Ferdinand Céline. Journey to the End of the Night may also refer to Journey to the End of the Night (Mekons album), a 2000 album by The Mekons; Journey to the End of the Night (Green Carnation album), a 2000 album by Green Carnation
Eason's second feature film, Journey to the End of the Night, starring Brendan Fraser, Mos Def, Alice Braga, Scott Glenn and Matheus Nachtergaele premiered at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival. [ 2 ] A Better Life
Journey to the End of the Night is the 13th studio album by the Mekons.It was released on audio CD on 7 March 2000 by Quarterstick Records.The album was recorded in London at the MontiSound & Corina Studios and also in Chicago at the Stinkpole & Kingsize Sound Labs, it was then finally mixed and mastered by Kenny Sluiter in Kingside.
In Journey to the End of the Night, Céline presents the horror and stupidity of war as an implacable force which "turns the ordinary individual into an animal intent only on survival". [62] McCarthy contends that for Céline war is "the most striking manifestation of the evil present in the human condition." [63]
Ferdinand Bardamu is the protagonist of Louis-Ferdinand Céline's 1932 novel Journey to the End of the Night (Voyage au bout de la nuit).. The hero's first name, Ferdinand, is shared with Céline, the author/narrator for whom he acts as a surrogate.
Its title is derived from the 1932 French novel Journey to the End of the Night by Louis-Ferdinand Celine. [10] The line "Some are born to sweet delight; some are born to endless night" are lifted from a William Blake poem "Auguries of Innocence", written in 1803 and published in 1863. [9]