Both these books catch that many-sidedness, besides brimming with other insights and oddities. |
|
The sheer complexity and many-sidedness of Foucault's approach to social and political life make any brief treatment of his work difficult. |
|
Standing out, though, is his masterly rendering of Lear, conveying the many-sidedness of the old man's character and development. |
|
That was part of his charm, a sign of his cultivated sense of the many-sidedness of the world. |
|
Those who know him as a postcolonial critic know only a small part of his many-sidedness. |
|
Children feel themselves as in paradise and they discover with all their organs of sence the fascinating many-sidedness of the nature. |
|
The many-sidedness that every job on the side brings along enpowers and delivers energy for again new areas. |
|
In striking a chord within us, it works on certain graphical impressions that reflect the many-sidedness of history and of life. |
|
What is equally extraordinary about Shaw's performance is its many-sidedness. |
|
The film «Geodata for everyone» illustrates the many-sidedness and importance of geodata and gives insight into their far-reaching applications. |
|
It is the characters' many-sidedness, their irreducibility to a formula, that he believes accounts for readers' continuing delight in Joyce's narrative. |
|
He has been influential on all of those instruments, but his chief legacy to younger jazz musicians might actually be his many-sidedness, the impulse that sometimes gets tagged as eclecticism. |
|
The many-sidedness of battle, the equivocal realism of death in a hundred forms, must have been developed among Homer's predecessors but can never before have been deployed with such massive and complex effect. |
|
What makes it work is the filmmakers' curiosity about the many-sidedness of need — the way that genuine benevolence can be cloaked in blunt intrusiveness or that insults can be a reckless demand for love. |
|
What makes this small movie work is the filmmakers' curiosity about the many-sidedness of need — the way genuine benevolence, say, can be cloaked in blunt intrusiveness, or the way insults can be a reckless demand for love. |
|