“Like other systems in decay, the Roman Empire continued to function for several generations after its vitality was sapped. For nearly a hundred years our Island was one of the scenes of conflict between a dying civilisation and lusty, famishing barbarism.” YearsGenerationsDyingSceneConflictHundredFunctionIslandsEmpiresDecayVitalityCivilisationRoman EmpireBarbarism Book:Churchill's History of the English-speaking Peoples Source: Churchill's History of the English-speaking Peoples
“When a novelist or screenwriter is looking for a subject, the element he's seeking is conflict. Conflict makes drama. Conflict produces great characters and memorable scenes. So war is a natural topic.” WarCharacterNaturalSubjectsProduceDramaSceneConflictElementsSeekingNovelistsMemorableTopicsScreenwritersGreat Character Author:Steven Pressfield
“My view is that musicals are love stories with great final scenes. It's just that simple. Musicals are also conflicts between two worlds. And by those criteria, 'The Color Purple' is actually exactly the kind of story that makes for a great musical. Yes, it's got hard stuff in it, but so does 'Les Miserables' and 'Phantom of the Opera.'” WorldKindDoeTwoHardStoriesStuffSimpleViewsColorSceneConflictFinalsMusicalLove StoryOperaPurpleCriteriaPhantomsGreat MusicTwo Worlds Author:Marsha Norman
“The scientific observer of the realm of nature is in a sense naturally and inevitably disinterested. At least, nothing in the natural scene can arouse his bias. Furthermore, he stands completely outside of the natural so that his mind, whatever his limitations, approximates pure mind. The observer of the realm of history cannot be disinterested in the same way, for two reasons: first, he must look at history from some locus in history; secondly, he is to a certain degree engaged in its ideological conflicts.” WayMindFirstsLooksTwoReasonScienceCertainNaturalHistoryScenePureConflictDegreesLimitationRealmsEngagedBiasObserversIdeologicalDisinterested Author:Reinhold Niebuhr
“I can hardly believe what these 12 caricatures [about Prophet Muhammad] have caused in the world. We Danes feel like we have been placed in a scene in the wrong movie. But I don't see the fight as a clash of civilizations. Rather, we must focus on avoiding exactly this type of conflict. We have to return to dialogue, to mutual understanding and to an acknowledgement of freedom of opinion.” WorldFeelsBelieveHas BeensI CanFightingUnderstandingOpinionFocusTypeReturnCivilizationSceneConflictDialogueProphetMutualAvoidingMuhammadClashCaricaturesAcknowledgementMutual UnderstandingProphet MuhammadClash Of Civilizations Author:Anders Fogh Rasmussen
“One of the tricks is to have the exposition conveyed in a scene of conflict, so that a character is forced to say things you want the audience to know - as, for example, if he is defending himself against somebody's attack, his words of defense seem Justified even though his words are actually expository words. Something appears to be happening, so the audience believes it is witnessing a scene (which it is), not listening to expository speeches. Humor is another way of getting exposition across.” IfsKnowsWayWantBelieveCharacterSeemsAudienceExampleListeningSceneConflictSpeechHappeningsDefenseTricksJustifiedAnother Way Author:Ernest Lehman
“Every scene has two people who want two different things, so there's conflict in every scene. You've got to duke it out, and you've got to get the other person to change his or her mind and do it your way.” PeopleWayWantMindPersonsTwoDifferentSceneConflictDifferent ThingsDukesTwo Different Things Author:William H. Macy
“We set the actors on the scene through the banal discourse of "conflict" in ways that fully deflect from the history and struggle of colonial resistance, refusing as well by that means to link the resistance to other forms of colonial resistance, their rationale, and their tactics.” WayWellsMeanFormActorsStruggleSceneConflictResistanceLinksDiscourseTacticsRationale Author:Judith Butler
“The New York gallery scene being as incredibly overpopulated and overmoneyed as it is, deep conflicts and contradictions aren't hard to find.” HardNew YorkSceneConflictContradictionGallery Author:Jerry Saltz
“No one can give anyone else the gift of the idyll; only an animal can do so, because only animals were not expelled from Paradise. The love between dog and man is idyllic. It knows no conflicts, no hair-raising scenes; it knows no development.” KnowsMenGivingCan DoAnimalDogHairDevelopmentSceneConflictParadiseIdyllic Author:Milan Kundera