It is a role we should embrace with real confidence, resisting nostalgia, refusing to retreat into isolationism. |
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There is no room for nostalgia, no looking back once we have put our hand to the plough. |
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I have not seen the film, but I understand that it has become a cult favorite among those who respond to millennial nostalgia. |
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In electoral politics you either sell a promise for the future, or nostalgia for the past. |
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Being a soppy sort of soul, I'm overpowered by waves of nostalgia, each time I visit the Chelsea area. |
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His unsettling ideas will be neutralised by nostalgia for a period already mostly forgotten. |
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I think there's an infectious wave of formless nostalgia sweeping the nation at the moment. |
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With love of nature and nostalgia for the past, they combine elements of jazz and rock. |
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One of the things with nostalgia is the warm feeling you get from the things that both frightened and fascinated you as a kid. |
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The days of the Empire were by then long gone, but not so the English romance with faraway places or its nostalgia for the past. |
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Every family of the street had a member present and nostalgia was the theme. |
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Showband nostalgia was much to the fore at Club 3 in Roscommon last Friday night week. |
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It evoked feelings of nostalgia, embarrassment and wonder at how I was thinking then. |
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If there's one thing the old left can't stand it's the nouveau riche and their rejection of Old Labour's cobble-street nostalgia. |
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Granada Plus is giving us the chance to wallow in nostalgia by rerunning the series each weeknight. |
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The writing seemed lazy and overly dependent on people having liked the first film and getting nostalgia for it from this one. |
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For Chaplin, technocracy must be fought, and nostalgia and sentiment must triumph. |
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It is a laddish, locker-room badinage that I remember with indulgent nostalgia from my days playing college rugby. |
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Stay too long and you inevitably drown in a quicksand of disappointment, seedy nostalgia and self-deception. |
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The idealism of childhood is further perpetuated by the advertising industry that plays on our nostalgia for a time when everything came easily. |
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These songs have set the trend for melody and have evoked the nostalgia, which was fading into oblivion. |
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A mixture of passion, nostalgia, and masculine bawdy infuses the cult of youthful athleticism. |
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Indeed, the network's commissioning editors appear to have been swept up by a tidal wave of baby-boom nostalgia. |
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This obverse voyeurism involves a gaze that is marked by a global optics filtered through nostalgia. |
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All that said, who could not feel more than a pang of nostalgia for the seventies when watching the documentary? |
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Despite its essential inequities and hidebound nostalgia, Old England was a gentle place of tolerance, common sense, and universal kindliness. |
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Unlike the fivesome's debut, this record speaks not only to the pop-savvy nostalgia snobs, but to oblivious youth culture as well. |
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Young men share their nostalgia for domestic life in these letters, while the female amanuensis momentarily becomes a soldier. |
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And the pop culture reference is just tiresome, just another bout of nostalgia for childhood telly. |
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There were tons of nostalgia, family sentiment, bonding, celebration, entertainment and even a message. |
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The visit to Ireland in mid-1963 was largely an occasion for sentiment, nostalgia and photo opportunities. |
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If they grow jaded, grow bored, or simply prefer sentiment and nostalgia to active participation, the last avenue of escape is closed. |
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And the trend in some parts of the world is towards huge, high-tech, intensive feedlot dairy farming with no place for sentiment and nostalgia. |
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The Irish visit was largely an occasion for nostalgia, sentiment and photo opportunities. |
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This is a show that, despite its bygone English rural setting, is without nostalgia or sentimentality. |
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Boyhood's end is a short but dramatic work full of conflicting emotions and nostalgia for days of yore. |
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Those brought up in the punk rock era will have a twinge of nostalgia for the days when it was a badge of honour to be gobbed on by your idols. |
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All that remains to Kaplan's industrial laborers is the nostalgia that blocks every aspect of anamnesis, even the capacity to forget. |
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As should become clear, I steer a course between condemning Forster's nostalgia and embracing it. |
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Such images, humid with tropical nostalgia, have come to represent Cuba to the world today. |
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The DVD might provide a pleasant evening for retirees in the mood for some innocuous nostalgia. |
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But when a graphic designer uses a typeface that is older than 30 years, it is dismissed as retro, nostalgia or emptiness. |
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His approach reflects a nostalgia for the gloriously learned mind and limber memory of a retrospectively constructed Renaissance reader. |
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The column is so full of nostalgia and reveries that it's a bit hard to locate the argument, but I think this paragraph is it. |
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The programmes gave us a chance to question accepted truths, while allowing us to wallow in a bit of nostalgia. |
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And so, donning the platforms, the flares and the beads et al the other night was pure, unadulterated nostalgia. |
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The mixture of resentment, nostalgia and love for an unattainable home underpins the documentary. |
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Strange to say, however, the trend towards nostalgia has met with castigation in the press. |
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It think this nostalgia was the inspiration for my Jubilee Garden design and because Ben had driven one of the locos in the museum. |
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And is this fact no more than nostalgia or is it a pointer to what the future holds? |
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Her gentle voice can lull you into a state of meditation and nostalgia and then another song will make your toe start tapping. |
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However sacredly boomers regard their nostalgia, it turns out their children regard it as more precious than their own. |
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To many people these days, photographs in black-and-white bring a sense of nostalgia, and stir memories of bygone times. |
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I look forward to her future with uncertainty, I look to her past with a twinge of nostalgia. |
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This is comfort food at its best, whether you crave warmth, sweetness and stodge or simply want to feed your nostalgia. |
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As the name indicates, the movie also conveys feelings of nostalgia and the pangs of lost love. |
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Both books are based largely on photographs by McMillan and are avowedly for the nostalgia market. |
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It translates in 2005 because this corner of music was always about nostalgia and taut drama constructed with tightly circumscribed language. |
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The religious and cultural bonds further cemented those ties with village people, which they remember with nostalgia. |
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In a fit of breakfast nostalgia, the blonde recently found her great-grandfather's recipe for boerewors. |
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School days always remain a nostalgia that refuses to leave one's subconscious like an aged ink stain on the shirt. |
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Besides being a nostalgia trip, it also promises to be an unforgettable culinary experience. |
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As the twentieth century draws to a close, connoisseurs of colonial nostalgia are, unsurprisingly, having a thin time of it. |
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Caine's mother was a charlady, so the scenes in the rural pile in the movie had a far deeper resonance for him than mere film-set nostalgia. |
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But when nostalgia overtook her, she found a California cheesemonger with the good stuff. |
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As with so many sports, the dawn of a new century brought nostalgia for a supposedly vanished golden age. |
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Too many Scots still retain a romantic nostalgia for the old industrial economy of mining, steel making and ship building. |
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Discussion of Byrne's old band signifies more than just misty-eyed nostalgia nowadays. |
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There is a morbid nostalgia in the desire to draw death back into our everyday lives. |
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Some of the oldest swingers in town are looking forward to a night of nostalgia on Friday. |
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It went out with a blitz of billboard and press advertising last week to create a sense of nostalgia for a lost form of popular culture. |
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Images that traditionally evoke nostalgia become symptomatic of inevitable decay. |
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Companies that are no longer in business spent millions on parties and promotions still spoken of in tones of disbelief and nostalgia. |
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I think I've indulged in a pathological, chronic nostalgia over the years, which I've traced back to my childhood. |
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Clubbiness and nostalgia have sunk the avant-garde as surely as bad writing and self-indulgence. |
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For those familiar with the era, the documentary is a sweet piece of nostalgia even if it fails to be comprehensive or intellectually incisive. |
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This knee-jerk nostalgia for nursing's mythical golden age simply will not do. |
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So is the pervasive autumnal, slightly melancholy mood of his pictures, like nostalgia for something not quite nameable. |
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They consider the monsoon a season of separation from the loved one, of nostalgia and nameless longing. |
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This long weekend will see a nation boss-eyed with self-indulgent excitement, hooked on the dangerous drug of royal nostalgia. |
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In this nostalgia for community some would discover utopian impulses, others would decry imaginary fulfilments as ideological. |
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On the strength of nostalgia I wonder if I dare dissertate about the days of outdoor toilets. |
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Then there will be a real state funeral, familiar nostalgia, more eulogies to praise duty and endurance. |
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The nostalgia evinced in such iconographic readings is also, Shaw argues, built into the very form of the image. |
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If you struggled through my early podcasts with the terrible audio and dodgy sound levels this will bring a sense of nostalgia. |
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So I took a trip to the website this morning and immediately got lost in a wave of nostalgia. |
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There is no nostalgia with regard to past connections with the states from the Warsaw Pact. |
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It is also full of nostalgia as they reminisce the days of yore in the form of song, dance and photos of old Hawaii. |
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Few people can remain untouched by the wave of nostalgia sweeping the land right now. |
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In addition, many have been gripped by a wave of nostalgia for the old east. |
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News of the plan to make Spam popular again triggered a wave of nostalgia at our house. |
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The ending is well done, if not totally unexpected, and is heavy of nostalgia and brotherly love. |
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As a study in nostalgia it is a gem, right down to the steam trains, sailing boats and 11s.6d. oilskins. |
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Friday, I enjoyed with an almost melancholy nostalgia because the skies were a deep blue with not a cloud or chemtrail in sight. |
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Here then is nostalgia with a personal intensity within a poem that evokes language games and surreal imagery. |
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For one who was born and grew up in the small towns of the Midwest, there is a special kind of nostalgia about the Fourth of July. |
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I think people are attracted to the humour and nostalgia of the Scots and Geordies that Alex portrays. |
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But when nostalgia for the old Russian Empire crept in, it became a kind of Great Russian chauvinism. |
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It was enough to bring tears of relief or nostalgia to a more emotional person's eyes. |
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There is no way of defending myself against the inevitable sense of nostalgia that descends in the weeks after Hogmanay. |
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Everybody's making comebacks nowadays, but Soft Cell have more to offer than nostalgia. |
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The traditional notion is that nostalgia is the mental and emotional retrieval of an object lost in the past. |
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The graphically crisp, retro lettering style adds a whiff of nostalgia to this evocation of language's reflexive capacity. |
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Anyway, apologies for the lengthiness of this reply, but the sense of nostalgia is lingering. |
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This writer has no nostalgia to blunt the awfulness and isn't capable of the humour that comes with retrospection. |
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The growth of revivalism as a collective phenomenon in recent decades might also be seen in relation to more general reactions against nostalgia. |
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Its revolutionary aims became in some of its products inextricably mingled with nostalgia. |
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His unrest was palpable, overriding the lucrative offers to produce more nostalgia in favor of following this higher calling. |
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In this case, the Soviet nostalgia is not a function of crude economic or social factors, but of the acute sense of geo-political loss. |
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Those who share my nostalgia for hats might be interested to know that it will be 150 years tomorrow since John Bowler invented the bowler hat. |
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Vinyl hasn't simply become a symbol of cultural preservation or nostalgia, however. |
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It sounds like all the songs were recorded ten years ago, left in a vault to mature to archaism and then brought out in a fit of nostalgia. |
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The effect of this is to give the film a curiously sanitised glow, as if it has been shot with the rose-tinted lens of nostalgia. |
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They arouse feelings of nostalgia, but are still manufactured for use today. |
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Tintypes is tender rather than torrid, its nostalgia is toothsomely sweet, not gooey. |
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For their disregard of the ruinous and destructive consequences of a hyperindustrialism without end, is itself a form of aggravated nostalgia. |
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Fashion took a step backwards as people developed nostalgia for the 70's and started wearing bell-bottomed pants and lots of flannel. |
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It is full of nostalgia for a Scotland past and gone but full of hope for the new, modern Scotland. |
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The success of the song is entirely dependent on its contemporary relevance in the guise of almost fetishistic devotion to 60s pop nostalgia. |
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There is no pseudo nostalgia going on here, but a genuine feel for a kind of music that is an integrant part of each one of the four members. |
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Thus they represented a social and cultural nostalgia for faith and community. |
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She's no nostalgia merchant for the musical Luddites, and it's not just the eternal verities of soul music that Jones traffics in. |
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Still, a large part of the adoration must be nostalgia for past glories on the basis of the dreary recent material which bulked out their set. |
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Nor is it adequate to cast her photographs simply as social history, or worse, to allow their viewing to be productive of an easy nostalgia. |
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And beyond the glitter of opulence, it must also glow with the burnish of remembrance, light up with the luster of nostalgia. |
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Even in postwar America, nostalgia and wanderlust kept tramp wannabes hopping boxcars. |
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I have a burst of instant nostalgia whenever I stroll through its rather beguiling streets. |
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Yet this creed is wasted on Shanghai youth whose nostalgia keeps them glued to the city. |
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An immigrant arriving today would feel the ache of nostalgia less because there are so many celebrations here now. |
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There's a sense of nostalgia, an indefinable ache, that crystallises the artist's repertoire at a certain point in time. |
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Freedom is an important element in nostalgia, but the more the concept of freedom of the seas is examined, the more complex it becomes. |
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A substantial percentage of garage rock fans are considerably younger than the music they enjoy, so nostalgia is obviously not a factor. |
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His whole body seems to awake as if a finger has prodded nerve spots of his nostalgia. |
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This again is a film about memory, but this time one in which nostalgia for time past becomes a pathology. |
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I have such a soft spot in my heart for the film that it's hard to see past all the nostalgia. |
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Ali's whimsical rendering of this imagined place evokes subtle feelings of nostalgia, and regret. |
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While displaying nostalgia for a vanishing rural and small-town America, their work also adeptly propagandized for the New Deal. |
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It has been convincingly argued that nostalgia is, in essence, a state of depression. |
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Along with the concept, there was this nagging feeling of nostalgia for the past. |
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Here is a hotel old enough to have a history, not just ersatz nostalgia, and the squeaky floorboards to tell it. |
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My flirting with him represents some wistfulness, nostalgia and regret of those years past. |
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In contrast to the wistfulness associated with nostalgia, however, the feeling here was one of nervousness, and even desperation. |
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Although the three were not ideally attuned, they brought a gentle whiff of nostalgia to a season of high-keyed dance. |
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On one occasion Chapman glowed with nostalgia, took a deep pull on his pipe, and jogged his narcoleptic friend's arm. |
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There may be occasional nostalgia for the pseudo-ideology of the old regime and for its glory days. |
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But nostalgia is nothing but remembrance of the past without remembering the pain, which forced us to leave that past behind. |
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Nevertheless, Smith would have us disregard all this talk of representation and exercising other people's prerogatives as nostalgia, or perhaps poetic licence. |
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There is only the faintest trace of nostalgia for her hometown, and little for American culture. |
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She sings about her roguish paramours with a strange mixture of melancholy, bitterness and nostalgia, leading one to question whether these kinds of men really exist today. |
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Yet her work is all heart, her flights of fancy rich with nostalgia without being mawkish. |
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For those of us living in large urban centers, irrational nostalgia is unavoidable. |
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That overpowering, but ultimately ill-placed, nostalgia seems to also ring true for executive producer Rick Rubin. |
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There's nothing inherently wrong with this type of nostalgia, but when it becomes as emulative and formulaic as it does here, it starts to seem like parody. |
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Every mix tape should contain at least one moment of nostalgia. |
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Otherwise his book is refreshingly free of theoretical cant or jargon, despite some nostalgia for a Marxist perspective and a deference to critics like Lukacs. |
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The nostalgia of yesteryears came alive as each young singer sought to recreate the magic of such singers as Mohammed Rafi, Yesudas and S. Janaki. |
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The carnie is no longer a punchline for a joke but a vanishing breed of vagabond that triggers wanderlust nostalgia, not thoughts of syphilis and criminal misdeeds. |
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While some poets and commercial enterprises gamely attempted to sustain pastoralism, many predicted that the discourse of nostalgia would be met with cynicism. |
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For years, the yellowing envelope and the letter it contained were kept solely for nostalgia value, despite being pressed into service as a humble bookmark. |
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Their back-up teams might be more prone to nostalgia and sentiment, especially those who have honed their tallying skills over many the long count. |
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None of my fellow smokers and ex-smokers can believe I still feel pangs of nostalgia for the habit I finally ditched in March after 25 years, on and off. |
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It brings to mind other wartime nostalgia films like Life is Beautiful, except without the mawkishness that ruins those dumbed-down crowd-pleasers. |
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Would anyone in this country be allowed to serve at the highest level of government while arguing that National Socialism in Germany represents a period of worthy nostalgia? |
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Nor is his often-riveting new memoir an exercise in nostalgia, apologia, or retread rhetoric. |
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Not much fun for him but a blast of nostalgia for people who used to live there and take a vicarious pleasure in virtual revisiting at a distance. |
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Kenney's work was gentle by Lampoon standards, etched with nostalgia and scenes of mock domestic bliss. |
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Both works have a strong undercurrent of grief and bitter nostalgia. |
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That warm fuzzy feeling of nostalgia was an almost physical sensation. |
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With every modification, that nostalgia starts to look and feel more like a dream. |
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A range of films looking back into history were marked by a specific nostalgia for the irretrievably lost times of harmonious multi-ethnic co-existence. |
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The software is dookie and has low replay value or nostalgia. |
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Top Comp appeals to racers and fans because it attracts a variety of cars, ranging from dragsters and Pro Mods to nostalgia dragsters and Pro Stockers. |
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As a piece of eighties nostalgia it does the job but for what you get you'd find better value in a compilation CD and some vintage sportswear, for there's little else here. |
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Some might regard such an old-fashioned view as misguided nostalgia. |
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Even after giving due recognition to lyricists and music directors, who can forget the haunting baritone that evokes such nostalgia in our minds, asks Johnson. |
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How galling it must have been to her to see once radical manifestos used for nostalgia. |
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Here in the midst of the winter blahs, one's mind veers toward nostalgia. |
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For Americans of a certain age, these words, even in our cynical time, yield a shiver of nostalgia, but also of purpose. |
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The twenties ended in a confused haze of nostalgia and innovation. |
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He isn't modern or English enough to deny a plastered mob its nostalgia. |
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The song is a sludgy, hard-rocking tune with a video that will give you a nostalgia trip. |
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In this callow atmosphere, Brooke Astor would never be an icon, but she is remembered with nostalgia. |
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What School Disco largely deals in is not nostalgia, but inoffensive, singalong pop and rock hits, the sort of thing you'd find on your average pub jukebox. |
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I took one last glance at the house, torn between its nostalgia and ghostliness, and jogged over to the car kicking up wet sand behind me as I did. |
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But some of us remember political discourse with dewy-eyed nostalgia. |
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The books are not nostalgia, and I would hate for them to be thought of as nostalgia. |
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The special relationship is in any case more to do with dewy-eyed nostalgia for the days of the cold war than the realpolitik of 21st century Europe. |
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Several of her poems are marked by pain, a sense of loss and nostalgia. |
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For the first few loops, it offered a nice little shot of nostalgia, but after 114 minutes of power ballads I yearned to jam two flathead screwdrivers into my ears. |
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This is the manifesto of an ironist, balanced between two poles but committing to neither, and Justice is perhaps best described as an ironist of nostalgia. |
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We could say, in a Platonic sense, that the dart of nostalgia hits man, wounds him, and precisely in this way puts wings on him, lifts him upwards. |
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A Tour of pure nostalgia with some of the greatest artists ever to grace the concert stage in Ireland will be coming to the north west next month. |
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She shook the feeling of nostalgia and flicked back to their current hit. |
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Modernism could tolerate neither Coleman's aestheticism nor his nostalgia. |
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It was with not a little nostalgia that I responded to similar saliva-inducing twittering last week, emanating from inside the forbidding walls of the Smithsonian Institution. |
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Indeed gothic novels, while depicting evil aristocrats flouting law and convention, also betrayed a nostalgia for the feudal order and aristocratic values. |
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On the side was an irregularly shaped, beautifully rendered midwestern landscape which evoked tears of nostalgia for the north country I had forsaken. |
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And now here we are, some of us anyway, looking back with syrupy nostalgia to the Sam Goody days! |
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Tin became wistful and in a surge of nostalgia offered to show me round. |
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The trump card is nostalgia, but is that enough to carry a film? |
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I think people are attracted to the humour and nostalgia that he portrays. |
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A letter from an old flame fluttered to the welcome mat this week, tinged with the rosy glow of nostalgia and giving off a faint melancholy whiff of might-have-beens. |
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The mixed-media collection evokes nostalgia for halcyon days through fragmented images of the past. |
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For a second I became lost in memory, lulled into nostalgia by the sensory banquet of collective human death. |
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This is nostalgia as a recording exercise rather than a lesson in empathy or comprehension. |
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Illustrating the landmark moment in the equal rights movement with an image of Bert and Ernie instantly conjures up nostalgia. |
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However, Woo does not celebrate this violence, but rather uses it to represent a nostalgia for a lost code of honor and chivalry that he sees as necessary for human survival. |
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Again, the harsh conditions under which Shostakovich was compelled to represent himself are often found transposed to the prosaic sphere of paranoid nostalgia. |
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Both citationality and nostalgia repackage the past in present styles and for present uses, and both can contribute to Orientalizing backwardness in obvious and direct ways. |
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Bringing with them memories of repasts past, they have been welcomed with nostalgia by people who can remember the times when the two countries were one. |
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There is history and nostalgia within its pages, with old black-and-white photos of our suburbs in the 1920s and shots of rumpty and brightly painted bungalows. |
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What Rock created, then, is a twinge of nostalgia for a twinge of nostalgia. |
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Bellbottoms, beads and long hair will be back in vogue for a night of hippie nostalgia in the Ridgepool Hotel on Saturday night week next, October 30th. |
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They're full of introspection and nostalgia lately, but the impetuousness that made their early records so enjoyable still burbles to the top on a pretty regular basis. |
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Such implausible idealizations, then as now, go hand in hand with nostalgia for the lost or vanishing world of the Gael as initially evoked by ethnographic prefaces. |
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All my nostalgia for Venice has been evoked by an article in this week's Spectator, in which Stephen Glover describes the sybaritic pleasures of his weekend. |
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Instead of showing examples of British design, I decided to use imagery that summed up 'Britishness' and conveyed an element of nostalgia and kitschness. |
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It was a country that had succumbed to paralysis and defeatism and nostalgia. |
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When we bump into each other at meetings or conferences we share a momentary nostalgia because we bumped into each other in activist circles back then. |
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Today, the Hinde Studio photos, the same images blown up to large-scale prints, speak to the optimism of the times and our nostalgia for that cheerful sanguineness. |
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What is it about nostalgia that so effectively scrambles our evaluative faculties? |
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I cannot read this morning's gospel lesson without a little nostalgia. |
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There is no nostalgia here, only loss and small consolation. |
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For a poet content to dwell in the gap between an inner and outer reality and between ideal and real worlds, nostalgia for the past must not monopolize one's identity. |
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Her early nocturnes display an antimodernist nostalgia for pre-reservation Indian life that would have appealed to both non-Indian and Indian viewers. |
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Many members are fed up with being told they are fools, and the resentment it creates increasingly finds expression in a subcurrent of misplaced nostalgia for old Labour. |
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Eventually admiration for Jacobitism was adopted, along with tartan, by the Hanoverians themselves as part of a general nostalgia for the good old days. |
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In this view, Americans' obliviousness ended with an outbreak of nostalgia at the turn of the century, fanned by general concern over the heedless pace of industrial society. |
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I spent the day under a cloud of self-pity and maudlin nostalgia. |
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They borrowed their tropes, plots, and denouements from an American cultural tradition that included theories, artworks, and stories that linked nostalgia and extinction. |
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In other words, it may be that the only thing more seductive than the lure of the comfy life is the gauzy embrace of nostalgia. |
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Anyway, since the '70s, when folks started adulating the '50s, the nostalgia industry has learned to mine and resell the best stuff from 20 years ago. |
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As long as we have baby-boomer nostalgia and Internet gossip, the tendencies to idolize or vandalize will be indulged. |
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The platformer side of the game is as stale and uninventive as ever, but the multiplayer offering, which smells of nostalgia, will definitely please fans. |
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Because they avoid a purely synthetic sound, their music is often described as having a warm, emotive quality often meant to inspire nostalgia. |
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There is a fond nostalgia for the revolution in a stenciled image, a retro reference to the utilitarian aesthetic of the workers' struggle. |
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The ornamental grillwork over its front door brings a touch of Art Deco nostalgia into the 21st century. |
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Beyond the social trend, beyond an artificial nostalgia for an elusory safety, an interesting phenomenon appeared in the Romanian press. |
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I am going to create a trigger to the feelings of nostalgia, that this time at sea will nowise be lost. |
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Now caravanning has become another medium for people, now immune to cheap foreign holidays, to capture the nostalgia of their youth. |
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The once familiar payphone in every village, town and city looks set to be the stuff of nostalgia as the mobile dominates the airwaves. |
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The descriptions of New York City and The Bronx are so accurate and graphic that it invokes real nostalgia. |
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But The Brooklyn Inn did not choose the beer out of nostalgia for Texas or to cater to a Texpat clientele. |
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What's going on instead is more interesting than that, or than mere nostalgia or even some strain of reactionary Luddism. |
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From graphic novels to fantasy to nostalgia, her selections make for the perfect means of escape on a warm summer day. |
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Instead, A Good Day To Die Hard cynically exploits our nostalgia for one of modern cinema's most tenacious action heroes. |
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Now, when he is recognized, it is invariably with affection and nostalgia. |
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The nostalgia appears again later in the pacier Fury Of Chonburi and Glasgow Coma Scale Blues. |
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Stuck in an unfulfilling relationship, an impromptu Facebook message from her first love sends her spiralling into self-reflecting nostalgia. |
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But this steaming pie of nostalgia, written by John Godber, does not sentimentalise the English holiday, now fading in the photo albums. |
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We can lead a strong European foreign policy or, lost in hubris nostalgia or xenophobia, watch our influence in the world wane. |
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And a clip of Robbie Williams taking his keks off on The Big Breakfast is a piece of 90s nostalgia in a nutshell. |
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The feeling of nostalgia for jewelrylike watches extends beyond the practical. |
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Honda's tribute to yestertech is the GB500, a British-style nostalgia trip, right down to clubman handlebars, and air-cooled 500-cc Single. |
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There's a large nostalgia thing going on,'' said Christy Schiffler, one of two soda jerks who work the fountain the six days a week it's open. |
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A wave of nostalgia swept over me when I saw my childhood home. |
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Great fun for nostalgia fans and those new to the show, this is one DVD not to miss, sucka. |
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Perhaps it is too late to wallow in the futility of nostalgia or to merely mourn those who deserve a lot more than condolences and commemorator. |
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The female equivalents were called Merveilleuses and adopted Greek dress and espoused a neo-classical nostalgia. |
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Readers of an impressively mature vintage will recall with a kind of melancholy nostalgia a radio programme called The Brains Trust. |
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His nostalgia is worsened by the knowledge that the perfect exteriorization of subjectivity is impossible. |
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Who cares that they're the latest faded popstrels to cash in on the current fondness for nostalgia? |
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Two elements present in the photos but missing from the media's encomia of London are violence and nostalgia. |
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Sometimes it refers, whether with appreciation, nostalgia or critical analysis, to idyllic or enigmatic aspects of the English countryside. |
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Other critics claim that 21st century Bond movies reflect imperial nostalgia. |
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A Good Day To Die Hard is a high-speed tour down Memory McClane that cynically exploits our nostalgia for one of modern cinema's most tenacious action heroes. |
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Director Jo Davies and her team conjure up an impeccable sense of comic nostalgia, with Victorian disappearing acts and some seriously frivolous costumery. |
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Before the holiday wish lists and mad buying rush each year comes a dose of nostalgia with the National Toy Hall of Fame's annual picks for enshrinement. |
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The Broadway musical Beatlemania, an unauthorised nostalgia revue, opened in early 1977 and proved popular, spinning off five separate touring productions. |
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Breitling uniquely combines nostalgia, tradition, and superb craftsmanship in a replica of one of the first chronographs, it also features a rotating bezel and a sliding rule. |
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Nick mines a rich seam of nostalgia taking in clackers in the attic but is firmly in the present when he locks targets on The Incredible Melting Man of British politics. |
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The moment she saw her long lost son's clothes, the mother burst into tears butstarted to ululate in mixed emotions of nostalgia and celebratory happiness. |
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And although Devlin's patterned minidresses and Pan Am travel bag give the work a period flavor, Bernadette never loses itself to nostalgia, moralism, or hagiography. |
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The likes of Louis Vuitton and Prada embraced 1950s nostalgia with wasp-waisted circle skirts or prim and proper pencil skirts, along with corset-style tops. |
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First, older coin-operated arcade games and pinballs are increasingly sought by collectors and those who want to share nostalgia from the arcade heyday with their children. |
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He vigorously resisted auteurism of both the hobbyist and the sacerdotal varieties, and kept away from canons and nostalgia and chitchat and received ideas. |
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The nepenth of nostalgia is replaced by an amphetamine of anticipation. |
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To insist now, with blinkered nostalgia, on the value of judgment and individual subjectivity is to extend these terms ahistorically in a way that strikes me as untenable. |
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Lest Rockwellian nostalgia blur reality, segregation of the races was the law and my earliest recollections of its sinister consequences remain strong to this day. |
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