An authorial motive can be discerned in Austen's having made her heroine's father a marine. |
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Here, with this problem, the relatively new genre of the prose poem resurrects authorial intention as a key to reading. |
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Even so, this ambivalence about the redemptive value of art does not efface the authorial voice of the film. |
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Such literatures often reveal an authorial distaste for the social types involved. |
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The gain was in authorial sympathy and readerly involvement, as well as the dispersal of interpretive possibilities. |
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In this sense, his authorial interventions served, in his own mind, to create an emotionally authentic text. |
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Yes, it's mixing, not layering. The effect of this is to defamiliarise the author, or, at least, authorial intent. |
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More complex instances of authorial disruptions might be labeled narratological syllepses. |
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Other authorial alterations were not due to censorship but to changes in time, space, or other conditions of performance. |
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No authorial comment has been more widely noted than the request of Chekhov that his plays be performed as comedies. |
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The culpability of traditional authorial power has left many a critical writer pussyfooting around issues. |
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Might a certain construal of authorial discourse interpretation be hospitable to reading by non-scholars? |
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Satire requires a degree of authorial detachment to reinforce the appearance of objective criticism in the public sphere. |
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The long takes become understandable as an authorial strategy for the organization of documentary materials. |
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On the other, the book makes no concession to ways in which authorial intent might be shaped or scuttled by external factors. |
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Unlike the absconding narrators who skulk out of sight in most modern novels, James refuses to hide behind the mask of authorial anonymity. |
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That nod in itself contradicts his assertion that my historical account lacks authorial analysis. |
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It is quite readable, with a strong sense of narrative and a distinctive authorial voice. |
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The book is studded with similar examples of this authorial scale-balancing. |
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Note that Carroll is here assuming that authorial intention is relevant to interpretation. |
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The camera's authorial control transforms the workers into an army of extras. |
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On the other hand, the extent of our own authorial contribution is very considerable. |
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Except for a few meandering authorial digressions, the novel maintains a cracking pace from start to finish. |
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We spent much time deconstructing notions of authorial originality, yet we proceed as if we were all born yesterday. |
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Questions are profusely interpolated into the authorial commentary and characters interrogate themselves and others constantly. |
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Rice-Oxley will not only be an authorial presence on stage though, as the accompanying music is a recording of her singing Latin phrases to punctuate the English text. |
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Just as he stints discussion of aesthetics, so he repeatedly writes as if authorial intention were merely instrumental, a matter of having one's say about certain issues. |
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We claim property and authorial rights on pictures, drawings, calculations and other documentation. |
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I think when you move from novel to TV script, you lose your authorial voice. |
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To her great credit, Sally was as adamant about my authorial freedom as Ben was, until last week. |
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Our readerly obsession with authorial judgments, psychological and moral, ideological and political, easily misses this paradox inherent in novel writing. |
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Thanks to the Internet, we have become expert parsers of language, meaning, and authorial intent. |
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Eliot clearly had authorial doubts about her concluding remarks. |
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Nothing here is obscured or confused by authorial partiality. |
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These images reveal, without authorial commentary, the mixture of earnestness and fecklessness, solemnity and comedy that marks the typical contemporary parade. |
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The very unoriginality of the slogans points to the fact that they're not in the authorial voice but are more description of the cultural landscape. |
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When authorial intent is removed from the game world, we lose the one thing that bothered to check what we were doing. |
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The same cannot be said for many of the other joke-tellers who suddenly come over all authorial and decide it's time to express themselves artistically. |
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The meanings of a poem, for instance, were derived from how the words worked together in a formal context, not from authorial intent. |
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A ponderous weight of authorial omniscience and compassion conveys the reality — single, one-shot, claustrophobically limited — of life itself. |
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A more mature authorial voice would be a synthesis between the two — neither self-righteously indignant nor willfully naïve. |
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Nabokov's keys lead the reader away from truth and subjugate him to the authorial will, a technique that had been successfully tested by Gide a decade earlier. |
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But the interference between the substitutional principle of origins and the authorial or performative principle of artifact production was dynamic. |
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Then again, this slightness may be one of countless authorial jokes about just what it is insignificance entails. |
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Mr Harwood stubbornly refuses to use his authorial voice to issue a judgment on any of his characters. |
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Until now, law-makers have thought only of extending exclusive authorial rights. |
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Exemptions are key factors in striking the right balance between authorial and public interest under copyright systems. |
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Finally, God's absence, reflected in his impossibility to offer neither reprimand nor comfort, is mirrored in a simulation of authorial impotence. |
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He suggested the problem might be the slenderness of her novels, coupled with a certain lack of authorial self-aggrandizement. |
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They also stipulate penalties for the infringement of the authorial rights of others. |
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The notion that we have to construct the idea of self and an authorial voice in such reductive pronoun-based terminology is, I think, a flawed one. |
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Her scholarship discovers new and interesting connections, and raises scribal and authorial issues which are of pertinence to any student of the period's manuscripts. |
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In any case, my job is to tease out that meaning, that authorial impetus. |
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Yet this downtick reflects not an increase in authorial rumination but a marked decrease in Flashman's appetite for trouble... Flashman believes that identity is not acquired or bestowed so much as rehearsed. |
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Rand never once seems struck by the contrast between the taciturnity she so admires in her hero and the authorial verbosity that stretches the novel to 727 pages. |
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Henry IV, Part 1, chronicle play in five acts by William Shakespeare, written about 1596 97 and published from a reliable authorial draft in a 1598 quarto edition. |
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It was created with authorial intent and ideological purpose to extend the spectacle of the costumed individuals and the characters they represented, across time and space. |
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It's a literary experiment, however accidental or forced by circumstance, that shatters through stale academic debates about authorial intent and semantic autonomy. |
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In Aesthetica in Nuce, wearing the authorial mask of the 'kabbalistic philologian', he provocatively maintained that initiation into orgies were necessary before the interpreter could safely begin the hermeneutical act. |
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The attribution gratifies the authorial ego, it's true, and maybe the near-ubiquity of bylines is just another instance of the everyone-wants-to-be-a-star syndrome. |
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Textual transgressions are documentable, but matters of authorial intent are characteristically far less transparent. |
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Some artists, like John Cage, have adopted aleatoric methods of composition in order to remove any trace of authorial expression from their work. |
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Varying authorial viewpoints, Pauline has dropped her habit of writing in the first person and concentrated on penning simple songs about life's quirky ups and downs that her audience can readily identify with. |
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No authorial interjections or stern warnings. |
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While the journals have a strong subjective authorial presence, the notebooks are much more dispassionate, objective, and are generally written in the passive voice. |
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Freedom from such rigidities may save a lot of authorial time. Non-fiction books will also benefit from another change that comes with digitisation. |
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These are different from in-house productions because they have a high degree of authorial control and expression, they benefit from an independent voice, and they don't have any constraints of rules and mandates overhead. |
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You, the present reader, are trapped in this self-reflexive moment where the topics of writing, authorial power or intention, and the finished text or article each become subject. |
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The usual authorial disclaimer applies: Interpretations and opinions expressed in this Report are solely the responsibility of the authors, as are any errors or omissions. |
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Any infraction on this legal protection concerning intellectual and authorial properties will lead to a recognizance of 2.500 euros per calendar day. |
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The SRI indices exhibit a particular concern for indigenous rights, including the right to cultural life, the benefits of scientific progress, and protection of authorial interests. |
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This is a two volume work with detailed information and the publishers Beadle and Adams, lists of titles and authorial biographies. |
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Blogging, wiki-ing, coding are all activities that generate authorial product. |
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One might quibble with the decision to seriate editorial notes in a continuous sequence with authorial notes where such exist. |
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In authorial exordia, invocations, prologues and comments, the reader finds ample proof of an epic conception of the works. |
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No authorial, arguably complete version of the Tales exists and no consensus has been reached regarding the order in which Chaucer intended the stories to be placed. |
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Clay Smith has argued that this sort of allusiveness serves to situate Gaiman as a strong authorial presence in his own works, often to the exclusion of his collaborators. |
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Modernist art thus sought to extinguish the affective content of authorial personality, sublating that content in objective forms memorializing their expressive origins. |
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Implicitly, the enunciative mise en abyme reflects an implied author who is attempting to persuade an authorial audience that would identify with the dismayed people. |
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In polyphonic novels, characters break through the monologic plane of the novel and create a plurality of autonomous voices, independent from the authorial discourse. |
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