10 POLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PINCE NEZ»
Discover the use of
pince nez in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
pince nez and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in Polish literature.
1
Spectacles and Other Vision Aids: A History and Guide to Collecting
Many models of pince-nez were designed to fold together when not in use (Figure 456). They could be hung from the neck, placed in a pocket, or placed in a case (Figure 457). Pince-nez were also used as sunglasses (Figure 458), though the ...
J. William Rosenthal, 1996
2
Battleship Potemkin: The Film Companion - Strona viii
... 59 (a, b, c & d) The pince-nez as signifier: seeing and not seeing, being and not being 60–1 The Potemkin premiere in Moscow, January 1926 66 Tisse, Douglas Fairbanks and Eisenstein, Moscow, July 1926 67 List of Illustrations ix 20. (a, b ...
3
The Return of Sherlock Holmes: The Adventure of the Golden Pince-nez
"The Return of Sherlock Holmes" is the third series of stories featuring the world's most famous detective, Sherlock Holmes. This particular book is the tenth story of the third series.
Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir, 2016
4
The New Finding Sherlock's London: Travel Guide to Over 300 Sherlock ...
PINCE-NEZ. 1894. It was a cold and rainy November night in 1894, when Holmes and Watson had a midnight visitor. Watson looked out the window, and saw a lone cab coming from Oxford Street. He rushed down to admit their guest, before ...
Thomas Bruce Wheeler, 2009
5
The Imaginary Signifier: Psychoanalysis and the Cinema - Strona 200
In The Battleship Potemkin the Tsarist doctor's pince-nez - momentarily immobilised and, so to speak, kept from falling into the sea by the insistent gaze of the close-up (as well as the ropes in which it is entangled), 'caught' by the camera when ...
6
Literature, Cinema and Politics 1930-1945: Reading Between the ...
In Potemkin, Eisenstein creates narratives with the priest's cross and a pair of pince-nez with similar effect. He first shows the crucifix when the priest appears at the back of the ship during the initial rebellion, and taps it across one hand and ...
Edward nodded at Pince Nez and shouted, “When?' “Thirtysix,” said Pince Nez without hesitation. “Two years before the damned earthquake closed off the inland passage. Too damn bad, too.” Edward nodded in commiseration. “That would ...
8
Ironskin - Tom 1 - Strona 81
she said to Pince-Nez. Pince-Nez stretched her feet comfortably into the path of a woman towing two marriageable daughters away from the food. “Anything that lives forever gets bored,” she said. “Like you, you old bag,” said Shoes amiably.
9
Eisenstein, Cinema, and History - Strona 65
The ship's doctor, Smirnov, responding to protests that the ration of meat is spoiled, officiously removes his pince-nez to perform inspection. Curtly dismissing the claim, Smirnov turns on his heel. He pauses in a nearby passageway with the ...
10
International Handbook of Semiotics - Strona 1116
when later in the sequence, in the ensuing mutiny, the doctor, along with the other officers, was thrown into the sea, the pince-nez assumed special meaning, becoming a sign of the downfall of the ruling class, “thrown overboard.” Cinematic ...
Peter Pericles Trifonas, 2015
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «PINCE NEZ»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
pince nez is used in the context of the following news items.
David Suchet reveals the secret to Poirot's “rapid, mincing” walk
His trademarks include the waxed moustache, the pince nez and the distinctive Belgian accent but not least among Poirot's defining characteristics is that rather ... «Radio Times, Oct 12»