You can be a silver-spoon, blue-blood elitist, but if you wear the Democratic label you are presumed to be connected and empathetic. |
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When I got to Union in New York, the culture was elitist, Eurocentric, competitive and individualistic. |
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Considering Rousseau, with whom he quarrelled, as utopian, he hypothesized an art which was morally neutral and elitist. |
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Nineteenth century liberalism, with its emphasis on equality before the law, was therefore elitist and conservative. |
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There are some experiments, but universities in many of these countries are very elitist. |
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However some see his group, founded in Madrid in 1928, as secretive and elitist. |
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Make no mistake, the Democrats are guilty as well, they are often elitist and paternalistic. |
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To do this we now turn to an approach based on contrasting views according to which modern democracies can be either elitist or pluralist. |
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The labor history in this book will be as institutional and elitist as the rest of it. |
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At the core of the crisis is the fact that many of our doctors are out of touch and elitist. |
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Many individuals, members of Congress, political leaders, and the news media showed its true racist and elitist nature. |
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The organization has again managed to avoid allowing transparency and accountability into its secret and elitist decision-making. |
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But not everyone is in love with hip-hop, or the elitist, only-cool-when-nobody-likes-you sensibilities of garage rock. |
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There was a time when success was considered elitist and mediocrity was the norm. |
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Despite the obvious appeal such elitist and exclusionary tactics lend to the club, it's sort of a shame. |
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Thus he was labelled an elitist and his invitation to appear on Oprah's show was withdrawn. |
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He had become a jazz elitist who played with the best and demanded the best in himself. |
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Whenever these self-appointed guardians of alcoholic and architectural merit get involved, an elitist macho tone taints proceedings. |
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I don't think this kind of elitist exclusionist behaviour is going to make any difference to anything in the long run. |
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Finally, elitist condescension, however merited, helps cement Bush's bond to the masses. |
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Early group portraits show noble surgeons parading their medical knowledge with elitist pomp. |
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I don't mean this in an elitist or cliquey way, for there can surely be no elite or clique in Manchester. |
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It has rid us of a pestilential politics based on religious hatred and elitist contempt for the poor. |
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When cultural studies denigrates literature as elitist, this is hard to distinguish from a long national tradition of bourgeois philistinism. |
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Some seem to regard it as a kind of elitist ploy designed to make things difficult for the disadvantaged. |
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Such shallow and untenable reasoning lies at the heart of many sexist, racist and elitist dogmas. |
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They disdained Kerry's internationalism as effeminate, unpatriotic, a character flaw, and elitist. |
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It's bordering on elitist snobbery, and is already as boring as the series. |
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The American arts fan, long mythologized as a snooty, wealthy elitist, is changing. |
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It's not highbrow in an elitist way but you have to pay attention and think while listening to it. |
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The obsession with upholding tradition has strengthened the common perception of tennis as an elitist hobby. |
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Milne says her route to success as a soloist gives the lie to frequent claims that opera is an elitist art form. |
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He does not accept that opera is an elitist art form or that it should be scaled down in a bid to reduce the cost. |
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The medium is also significant because his artworks are anything but elitist. |
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The choreographer feels high ticket prices are prohibitive to most people and make the arts appear elitist. |
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Gone are the days when game was seen as elitist because of prohibitive prices. |
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I suppose they would have also called literacy or public schools an elitist agenda back before anyone but noblemen knew how to read. |
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Before you dismiss me as a vinous elitist with more dosh than brain cells, let me ask you a couple of questions. |
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A bunch of slick, elitist, wingnut hucksters are taking them to the cleaners. |
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Hamilton was educated in the elitist qualities of Scotland's early improvers who tended to equate cultivated manners with moral virtue. |
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He could never shake off his image as a somewhat effete elitist from America's prosperous northeast. |
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She was an inspired gardener who wrote like an angel, but she was elitist to her fingernails. |
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Educational standards are perceived by many, including some within the educational establishment, as elitist and exclusionary. |
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Exploitation movies are often criticized as trashy, but poor taste is an elitist concept. |
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Independent schools do not like being termed as elitist and they are working hard to keep their fees down. |
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Some people would call it a property of those they call adepts but this is just an elitist illusion. |
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If opera is an elitist, outmoded art form for high-brow aesthetes, then no one's told these kids. |
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Today such sentiments tend to be treated with scepticism, if not depicted as elitist. |
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And, to make matters worse, there is much misunderstanding concerning a few of these high arts and the accusation of being elitist. |
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Each is at once elitist and popular, adept at serio-comically pressing the limits of the Spanish language's expressivity. |
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Sometimes it's like hearing an earnest musical based on an elitist rock critic's dream of left-field rock history, which isn't so funny. |
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According to certain conservative politicians and commentators I am elitist, out-of-touch and un-Australian. |
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They think it is elitist, that it bestows on individuals a level importance unbecoming of sportspeople, especially those involved in team sports. |
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The main character is an elitist snob who looks down on the naive Tasmanian. |
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The professor at University of North Carolina demonstrated that she is a thick-skulled elitist. |
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But if it approves this issue without sending it out to referendum, it's copping an elitist attitude with the snootiest of them. |
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There is never any occasion for colonial arrogance or Eurocentrism or hegemonizing the discourse of the Other, for being judgmental or elitist. |
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One argument that educrats make against programs like his is that they are elitist and benefit only a select few. |
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Without intending to he made a face which clearly let me know his opinion of smug, elitist and over-educated eggheads like myself. |
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Contemporary education has gone from elitist occupation to popularization, so that the number of female graduate students is increasing rapidly. |
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Classical dance and music are no longer elitist, but within the grasp of middle income Indians. |
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Wharton held a persistently elitist view that some categories of people were in fact superior to others. |
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Much of our discourse is inaccessible because of elitist language and our focus on print-based media. |
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Far from being elitist, this song hails even the so-called socially deviant members of society such as hustlers who perch on street corners. |
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The irony is that the official programme is not particularly elitist, either in terms of classical art forms or cutting-edge postmodernism. |
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By merely dubbing it as elitist or foreign we cannot wish away the fact that it is as much a part of our heritage as any other modern Indian language. |
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But this 1929 study of the modern world, his most famous book, struck me as hopelessly nostalgic and elitist. |
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Often these protagonists seem gruff and unapproachable, even privileged and elitist, at least at first, perhaps concealing a painful shyness and a need for privacy. |
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Opponents of the thesis dismiss this identity label as elitist. |
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Her original statement caused an uproar from working mothers who argued Paltrow was out of touch and elitist. |
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John Kerry is sagacious and experienced, but he has an elitist sounding accent that will make it impossible for him to win a national campaign in the media age. |
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Banville published a letter in The Guardian criticizing the elitist preferences of the Booker judges. |
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The technique transfused her ego with indirect suggestions of being elegant, refined, and of possessing discriminating taste, sophistication, prestige, and elitist status. |
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Indeed, there are schools in other regions which are openly elitist. |
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Amassing a collection of his own, moreover, might eventually ease his entrance into elitist scientific circles. |
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In the long run, we pay an even heavier price by galvanizing opponents bent on freeing themselves from what they perceive as elitist disrespect for democratic governance. |
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Beneath this undercurrent of grumbling is the philistine assumption that it is elitist or irrelevant to consider art which does not excite the mass market. |
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Fundamentalism is far more elitist and extortionist than we can imagine. |
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You may want to think of the fair as like an elitist high-society dinner party where certain guests don't want to be seated next to certain other guests. |
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After all, parents who prefer a liberal education are elitist, perhaps even racist or sexist, and parents who prefer a progressive education are woolly minded tree-huggers. |
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And, perhaps, smartest of all when the sitting president is frEQuently slammed as a chilly elitist with the EQ of Mr. Spock. |
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In the 18th century, white was an elitist color, for example. |
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Mr Walker describes Cymuned as an organisation which is both elitist and divisive. |
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Webster grew increasingly authoritarian and elitist, fighting against the prevailing grain of Jacksonian Democracy. |
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By being just as interested in popular as well as classical genres, he is credited with making the arts more accessible and less elitist. |
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Independent schools are often criticised for being elitist and such schools are often seen as outside the spirit of the state system. |
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Gervinus wrote with elitist disdain about the mechanicals of the play and their acting aspirations. |
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Attacked Critics of Opus Dei claim it is a secretive and elitist organisation and question whether politicians should be members. |
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Then all the apologists come and try defend this tai-tai. Come on la. They are all sama-sama elitist. |
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Gamble believes that in our determination to break away from elitist schooling, we have thrown the baby out with the bathwater. |
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Jefferson's views, while democratic and inclusive, were also elitist and exclusive. |
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Rosa Luxemburg and Eduard Bernstein have criticised Vladimir Lenin that his conception of revolution was elitist and essentially Blanquist. |
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It was becoming increasingly elitist, pretentious, and exclusive. |
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The culture in the Congress has become elitist and arrogance grows from it. |
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Finally, not only do philosophical approaches fail to capture the complexity and diversity of the Canadian reality, they are also often elitist. |
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The Republican voter base is anything but Northeastern or elitist. |
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The two values are obviously in tension, and some readers have concluded that he is an elitist democrat, while others count him as an earlier participatory democrat. |
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The use of the term is seen by some as elitist and boastful. |
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Commentators such as science fiction author David Brin have interpreted the work to hold unquestioning devotion to a traditional elitist social structure. |
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The widespread voter support for the Indian National Congress surprised Raj officials, who previously had seen the Congress as a small elitist body. |
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Its functional and decorative aspects can seem dishearteningly elitist and remote, and the techniques involved in its manufacture are formidably complex. |
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Gordon Brown's no class warrior and Cameron should be ashamed he joined the elitist Bullingdon Club rather than that his parents sent him to Eton. |
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Film 2012 With Claudia Winkleman Wednesday, BBC1 There's a whiff of something snarlingly elitist since Claudia Winkleman and Danny from the posh paper took over from Wossy. |
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