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dc.contributor.advisorBergerson, Andrew Stuarteng
dc.contributor.authorStitt, Lawrenceeng
dc.coverage.spatialEurope, Easterneng
dc.coverage.spatialEurope, Centraleng
dc.date.issued2012eng
dc.description.abstractUsing the tragic-heroic archetypes of Achilles and Hamlet, this paper examines the nature of choice in the real and imagined lives of two individuals living in Nazi-and-Soviet-occupied East-Central Europe: Maciek, a fictional character in Andrzej Wajda’s celebrated post-war film Ashes and Diamonds, and Rudi, an historical person examined in Andrew Stuart Bergerson and Maria Stehle’s “Rudoph Mosaner’s ‘Wanderjahre.’” An interdisciplinary, comparative analysis of these dramatic figures yields insights into the nature of human agency and the necessity of choice, especially in vital situations. Ultimately, for human agents, acceptance or refusal of choice itself may be equally important to particular decisions between two or more morally weighted options.eng
dc.identifier.citationLucerna, Volume 7, Number 1, pages 117-122eng
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10355/44910eng
dc.publisherUniversity of Missouri--Kansas Cityeng
dc.titleThe necessity of choice : reflections on film and history in occupied East-Central Europeeng
dc.title.alternativeReflections on film and history in occupied East-Central Europeeng
dc.typeArticleeng


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  • Lucerna, vol. 7 (2012)
    The items in this collection are the scholarly output of undergraduate UMKC students .

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