White Dog (Gary novel)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/White_Dog_(Gary_novel) an entity of type: Thing

Chien blanc est un roman de Romain Gary, écrit en 1969 et publié le 20 mars 1970 aux éditions Gallimard. Il a été adapté au cinéma dans le film Dressé pour tuer réalisé par Samuel Fuller en 1982. rdf:langString
White Dog, released in France as Chien Blanc, is a non-fiction autobiographical novel written by Romain Gary. Originally published as a short story in Life in 1970 (9 October), the full novel was published in 1970 in French in France by Éditions Gallimard. Gary's English version of the novel was published in North America in the same year by New American Library. The novel provides a fictionalized account of Gary and his wife's experiences in the 1960s with a stray Alabama police dog trained to attack black people on sight, and their attempts to have the dog reprogrammed. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Chien blanc
rdf:langString White Dog (Gary novel)
rdf:langString White Dog
rdf:langString Chien Blanc
rdf:langString White Dog
xsd:string Éditions Gallimard(French)
xsd:string New American Library(English)
xsd:integer 4908659
xsd:integer 1121754707
rdf:langString Book cover showing the head of a dog with jaws open
rdf:langString Cover of first edition, French release
rdf:langString France, United States
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString
rdf:langString French, English
rdf:langString Print
xsd:integer 257395259
xsd:integer 256 279
xsd:integer 1970
rdf:langString Chien Blanc
rdf:langString Romain Gary
rdf:langString Chien blanc est un roman de Romain Gary, écrit en 1969 et publié le 20 mars 1970 aux éditions Gallimard. Il a été adapté au cinéma dans le film Dressé pour tuer réalisé par Samuel Fuller en 1982.
rdf:langString White Dog, released in France as Chien Blanc, is a non-fiction autobiographical novel written by Romain Gary. Originally published as a short story in Life in 1970 (9 October), the full novel was published in 1970 in French in France by Éditions Gallimard. Gary's English version of the novel was published in North America in the same year by New American Library. The novel provides a fictionalized account of Gary and his wife's experiences in the 1960s with a stray Alabama police dog trained to attack black people on sight, and their attempts to have the dog reprogrammed. Gary uses the novel as a vehicle to denounce both racism and the activists supporting African-American rights, including his own ex-wife Jean Seberg and Marlon Brando. He also examines whether human responses to situations, including racism, are learned social behavior and whether they can be unlearned. In 1981, it was adapted into the controversial film of the same name, in which director Samuel Fuller made various changes to the novel's story to focus more on the dog and present a more pessimistic ending than the original novel. The film's American release after negative press from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) led to concerns of boycotts. Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette released a more faithful adaptation of the book in 2022.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 15348
xsd:string 2-07-027022-X
xsd:positiveInteger 256 279
xsd:string 257395259

data from the linked data cloud