There is also a lot of repetition, as some of the words try to make us realize that a new reflective stage has been reached, in addition to distinguishing between my mind. Spoken repetitions, like "this city is full of" subsequent horses, women and visions. Explain how my perceptions thoughts change, continuous with the description of the city.
Other repetitions like "who can sleep in Berlin" are used to …show more content…
since it's almost like he's coming through an unforeseen nightmare.
To start, you will read about an analysis of a poem and a commercial movie. The texts I treat are "Night in Berlin 1929" and "Go to bed with the trip to Berlin" Both texts are seen in conjunction with the interwar period. As we have to do with a well-known author from the period "Tom Kristensen" and a modern ad used to portray how Berlin is today. The most important points will be reviewed, and hopefully, a conclusion will be made to summarize the entire analysis.
The first text, from the well-known author "Tom Kristensen", has been set between World War I. Since it is about Berlin in 1929, 11 years after the First World War and a decade before World War II. In the interwar period, much of the literature, a depiction of reality, was also known as "social realism", because of the hassle of the First World War. But since the moment of the poem is between a contrasting moment where the world was particularly optimistic until cracked on Wall Street in 1929. Since the foundation of optimism became a result created after World War I, values of a brighter future, fellowship and without forgetfulness created by the most brutal and inhumane war the world had so far been known …show more content…
There is also a lot of repetition, as some of the words try to make us realize that a new reflective stage has been reached, in addition to distinguishing between my mind. Spoken repetitions, like "this city is full of" subsequent horses, women and visions. Explain how my perceptions thoughts change, continuous with the description of the city.
Other repetitions like "who can sleep in Berlin" are used to clarify the start of his self-reflective mind, in the beginning, Stage 4, line 4: "Who can sleep in Berlin?" To the rounding of the poem, ie the end of Stage 14, line 4: "Who can sleep in Berlin?" One can interpret it as walking from the descriptive in the city, from Stage 1-4 to the reflective and thoughtful, as one gets the main character's thoughts and wants to know throughout the poem after strofe 4.
Looking at the language of the text, it is clear that the text is expressionist, as it expresses my feelings, using the words and expressions that are