Western intellectuals are generally shifting to the left, certainly on these questions. |
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I thought that I had seen one tiny corner of an indiscriminate massacre of students and intellectuals, a bloodbath. |
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In the twentieth century, many radical intellectuals embraced the mass media. |
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Yet, whereas capitalists simply own the means of production, intellectuals are directly involved in the actual processes of production. |
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It seems that intellectuals live under the unquestioned assumption that what they are doing is important. |
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It was pretty much the usual crowd of unwashed jobless deadbeats, greenie lunatics, terrorist-sympathising intellectuals, and arts students. |
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Hull, once a hideout for beatniks and intellectuals, is now a living catwalk for the super cool and the terminally trendy. |
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Will we become sensationalists, or will we become intellectuals supported by listening to mentors and by producing substantive work? |
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But when intellectuals decide to improve the world they inevitably make a mess of it. |
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The academy subsidised poverty-stricken exiles and gave a voice to a huge community of intellectuals scattered across the globe. |
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However, intellectuals can alter the course of unnatural disasters such as government. |
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In the 18th and 19th centuries European and American intellectuals relied on craniometry to explain and defend racial hierarchy. |
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Going to an extreme, some nationalist academics and intellectuals have called for the severance of diplomatic relations. |
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The result is that many of Indonesia's ulama, or religious scholars, turn out to become modern intellectuals. |
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It may even be that critical intellectuals have some special obligations, though they have no monopoly on thinking or wisdom. |
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None of this can have warmed London's heart toward intellectuals, real or fraudulent. |
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Now, however, a covey of intellectuals have suggested that technology has changed the battlefield again. |
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In these new circumstances, he has counselled writers and intellectuals to be cautious. |
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I have slowly come round to the view that Australians are right to distrust intellectuals. |
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For centuries, secular intellectuals have forecast the death of religion at the hands of modernity. |
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It was like a monkey house, and the head monkeys were snooty intellectuals with an axe to grind. |
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No proceedings were therefore brought against the high-ranking army officers so cordially detested by the intellectuals. |
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It is time secular and self-proclaimed leftist intellectuals called off their romance with irrationalism and romanticism. |
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In the West, the writers and artists and many of the clergy and public intellectuals are intractably anti-war. |
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The bottom line is that she believes in a secular government and she is backed and advised by a group of secular intellectuals. |
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Yet still our poverty activists and intellectuals insist that poverty is getting worse. |
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They get the latest books, we get to understand the latest thinking of these intellectuals. |
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Yet there is an important distinction between government by the intelligent and by intellectuals. |
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Are intellectuals and scholars always expected to find faults of their own people? |
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The intellectuals were persecuted for 40 years and now they are marginalised. |
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What Leftist intellectuals and agitators say is not what ordinary Leftists say. |
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Academics are interested in ideas, whereas intellectuals seek to bring ideas to an entire culture. |
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At the same time, a growing professionalism reduced the role of intellectuals as public sages. |
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It has to do with the intelligence of our opponents, the warmongering intellectuals. |
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Optimism of the will is all very well for imprisoned intellectuals, but Scotland could do with a little realism. |
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It's largely down to him that even quite foolish Frenchmen harbour the belief that they are intellectuals. |
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Recently, a group of Iranian intellectuals also reacted to the issue and signed a petition. |
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I don't think by any means it's something to be done by star intellectuals or people from the top. |
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For the most part, the intellectuals were projecting their own sordid chauvinism on to the working class. |
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It was written by a group of Arab intellectuals and experts with known concern for the Arab world. |
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This offered a platform for a large number of intellectuals and thinkers urging enlightened progress. |
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Artists and intellectuals alike were prevented from innovating or adopting new ideas. |
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It was used to bash intellectuals in general and it was used to bash the political left in general. |
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The fascist bent that infiltrated Argentina in the 1930s was quite popular among conservative artists and intellectuals. |
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What happened to the influential intellectuals and the trustworthy journalists explaining the ineluctable consequences of your present policies? |
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These traits have made him one of the liveliest and most incisive intellectuals in France. |
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It remains one of the best works ever written on the fascination that communism holds for generations of intellectuals. |
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In contrast, African intellectuals generally believe that this usage reflects the usual European or colonially derived stereotypes about Africa. |
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That is the way of human perversity, a perversity especially characteristic among intellectuals. |
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It was a movement among a large layer of intellectuals who were drawn towards the socialist perspectives of the workers' movement. |
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It is a great thing for intellectuals to discuss politics, but we don't want ignoramuses to discuss politics. |
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Globalism gratifies the same mental pathologies as Marxism and is therefore perfect for disillusioned intellectuals looking for a new home. |
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A dozen of the country's top scientists and intellectuals climbed aboard a hydroplane and flew out into the Bay of Rio to welcome him. |
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The resentful intellectuals of France, however, are in a class of their own. |
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The royal hall was full with expectations, the learned pundits and intellectuals were eager to know the outcome of the debate. |
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After the overturn of the Qing dynasty, Chinese intellectuals turned their eyes to Western countries and sought new ideas. |
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Outside we few, we happy few conservative intellectuals, use of the subjunctive in spoken speech has pretty much died out. |
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He comes from a high-class family of mandarin intellectuals who despised commerce and viewed making money as vulgar. |
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On my first trip to the pub I am reminded how half a dozen pints can reduce dazzling intellectuals to burbling halfwits. |
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The university rector is asked to form a team of Papuan intellectuals to start the process. |
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I mean, he's the very most hackiest of the hacks, but he's also the child of two serious conservative intellectuals. |
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Such dominion, already established with the water mill and other mechanisations, became part of the perspective of the new intellectuals. |
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At the other pole are specialist intellectuals who are involved in erudite discussions with other intellectuals. |
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There is no one of sufficient stature, no impartial media, and no intellectuals with adequate qualifications and credibility to arbitrate. |
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The writers and intellectuals in the Congress for Cultural Freedom were, like writers everywhere, temperamental and quarrelsome. |
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Most quislings come from the chattering classes, from academics and intellectuals. |
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Oil money has corrupted the media and a considerable segment of erstwhile critical intellectuals. |
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Accenture defined them as business intellectuals but they are probably better known as management gurus or business experts. |
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But Russian intellectuals themselves were as divided then as they are today between westernizers and Slavophiles. |
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In the 1920s and 30s it developed into a glamorous resort populated by rich aesthetes, dissident intellectuals and artists. |
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There are the razor-sharp scripts, penned by Matt Groening and a posse of ivy-league intellectuals. |
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It all set a tone of exclusivity and privilege, an air of refinement reserved for corporate leaders and tweedy intellectuals. |
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It seems to be reacting against the conventional attitudes of intellectuals at least those raised in the Western tradition. |
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Being great intellectuals, they pretend instead that their yuppie entertainments are as worthy as any art through the ages. |
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Subsequently, with other intellectuals, he agitated for political and social change, earning a reputation as a mild radical and socialist. |
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This rudeness came from both agnostic intellectuals and religious fundamentalists. |
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They are terrified of Leninist politics, which is nothing more for them than realpolitik practised by Marxist intellectuals. |
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He skillfully uses the books under review as a springboard for reassessing a variety of intellectuals, Victorian and modern. |
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Academics usually plough a narrow disciplinary patch, whereas intellectuals of his kind roam ambitiously from one discipline to another. |
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Historical figures, sportsmen and sportswomen, politicians, and intellectuals contribute to a common identity. |
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This sort of woolly headed thinking that believes only left-leaning intellectuals know what's best for us belongs back in the Dark Ages. |
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Indeed, the resistance of the working classes to socialist ideas made them the despair of middle-class intellectuals. |
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This was the kind of hysterical trash you would expect dittoheads to spout, not hugely influential liberal intellectuals. |
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The conflict between the votaries of Hindutva votaries and the Left-secular intellectuals has preoccupied the media. |
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Egyptian intellectuals and media on Friday morning lamented the death of Sherif at the hands of his kidnappers. |
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Chirac has been lofted to a pinnacle of popularity, with virtually no public dissent, even from France's normally disputatious intellectuals. |
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Lewis, whose academic qualifications were first class, challenged intellectuals on their own ground. |
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In contrast to political leaders and elders, community intellectuals retain the better qualities of both. |
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While appealing to intellectuals, it was distinctively proletarian in doctrine and temper. |
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To begin with, Eisenman was not an alcoholic, as seems requisite for English intellectuals, but more properly a neurotic. |
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Unusually for a British sovereign, George was at ease with intellectuals and country people alike. |
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To find out the how and why we have to go further back, to the 1880s, when London's and Europe's intellectuals were beset with doubt and anomie. |
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Repression of intellectuals was eased, only to be retightened at any sign of dissent. |
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Cardoso and the intellectuals often seem to be talking past each other in a dialog of the deaf. |
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Nowhere did one find any of the sloppy grammar and syntax so much loved by today's pseudo intellectuals. |
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Nevertheless there remains a climate of anti-Americanism among many European intellectuals. |
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I wonder if some resentment the anti-intellectual crowd feels towards intellectuals is rooted in academia. |
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In times of radical change, artists, rhetoricians, and critical intellectuals too often underestimate our importance and our powers. |
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He was in the vanguard of the generation of postwar Arab intellectuals who sought to steer the region toward a rationalist secular liberalism. |
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By 1914 most of their best-known intellectuals had quarrelled with Lenin's tactics and deserted the party. |
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That won him the derision of Western sophisticates, intellectuals and defeatists of all kinds. |
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It called on writers and intellectuals to abandon neutralism and say No to Stalin as they had once said No to Hitler. |
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I think, however, that what is more likely is that neoconservative intellectuals and blowhards have gained more influence. |
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They understood that the university's chief appeal to many intellectuals was not its scholarly rigor but the sense of community it provided. |
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No scholar can describe it, the intellectuals cannot know it, the literati and writers cannot recognise it. |
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In brief, there are at least three arenas of activity for critical intellectuals and oppositional educators. |
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Such a view ignores the extent to which intellectuals and politicians feed psychically on one another's approval. |
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For the intellectuals and the urban lower middle class, the new situation was a rude awakening of disillusionment and broken promises. |
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It was intellectuals who kept the spotlight on atonalism long after the public got alienated from it. |
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At the top were the Brahmans, priests of the sacrificial religion and intellectuals. |
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On the other side are a few dozen neoconservative think tank scholars and defense policy intellectuals. |
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Declinists also identify a loss in the power and influence over society that public intellectuals have. |
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At the very least, it is a considerably malnourished imagining of how, why and for whom intellectuals write. |
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A new pattern of migration of the intellectuals, technocrats, artists, and educated youth is naturally expected to develop. |
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The belief in the dignity and nobility of man no longer seemed tenable to most intellectuals. |
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The magazine noted that the market economy had led to the marginalization of public intellectuals, but they had never been more necessary. |
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Can you please tell the brainiacs and intellectuals that not everyone is a walking dictionary? |
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This is the day of martyred intellectuals, who were brutally killed by the occupation army and their cohorts. |
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It should be remembered that many western intellectuals, including atheist freethinkers like Bertrand Russell, were originally very optimistic about the Soviet revolution. |
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To keep its machine finely tuned, Bridgewater searches out young intellectuals in addition to hiring experienced workers. |
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Stalin's foreign admirers were wall-eyed intellectuals, tantalised by the violent engineering of Utopia as they stalked the corridors of the London School of Economics. |
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So when we speak of intellectuals or men of action, it is important to bear in mind that such distinctions are matters of degree, of mere tendencies, not absolutes. |
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Only by reacquainting workers, intellectuals and young people with a socialist perspective and culture can a new political road forward be charted. |
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He was as disdainful about the modern breed of leaders as he was about the Polish intellectuals back then. |
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Have westernised intellectuals underestimated the power of religion? |
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By opening their ranks to blue-collar workers and intellectuals alike Welsh choruses collectively represent a cross-section of the Welsh population. |
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To a considerable extent, a tight circle of New York intellectuals, Ivy League stars, Nobel laureates and Oxbridge luminaries replaced him and his cohort. |
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At the same time, as members of a leisured class, these intellectuals had no part in the labour of production, and consequently their theories were divorced from practice. |
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The intellectuals, students, et cetera, will turn on this government as repressive and undemocratic in the not too distant future. |
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Of course, no one should blame the intellectuals for not being able to grasp our fathomless economic mess. |
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The Archduke's houseguests included artists, intellectuals and royalty. |
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Of course, this was angrily resented by those outside the magic circle, especially if they were themselves intellectuals in every respect save being represented by him. |
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I would have expected more discussion on intellectuals as producers of ethnocentric symbols of exclusion, ethnic self-aggrandizement, self-pity, and exalted martyrology. |
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The leadership passed from intellectuals to semi-literate demagogues. |
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Groups like CAIR and leading intellectuals and imams have been denouncing acts like these for years. |
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Even as intellectuals dismiss the nation-space as a metaphysical concept, a transcendent notion, countless people across the world die and kill in the name of a nation. |
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I know of no rational argument which convinces me that plays that are enjoyed and discussed by intellectuals are any better than plays which entertain a middlebrow audience. |
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This was our birthright as intellectuals, but to possess it we needed to withstand the terror, loneliness, and isolation inherent in intellectual life. |
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This is difficult to accept in Europe because our intellectuals were always convinced that modernity brings with itself the extinction of religious faith. |
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Gradually, with painful slowness, his reputation filtered out to European intellectuals on the lookout for new currents from the literary suburbs. |
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Secondly there is the fact that the intellectuals are more totalitarian in outlook than the common people. |
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They were the only clients in the grand, overdone dining room, and as French intellectuals will do, they talked endlessly. |
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While happy to discuss past administrations' experiences with intellectuals, Troy is keeping mum about his current boss's interaction with the smart set. |
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His popularity in his lifetime rested on being able to use him as a stick with which to beat intellectuals, unrhymed poets and contemporary architects. |
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During a recent visit, I found liberals and intellectuals, jet-setters and slum dwellers, men and women, Brahmins and untouchables expressing this Hindu pride. |
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Yet a handful of committed neoconservative defense intellectuals in and out of government convinced the president, rightly or wrongly, to back the idea. |
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These vapid pseudo intellectuals are the problem with today's law schools. |
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Indeed, during the last decade the chief harbingers of leftist ideas have been the cosmopolitan intellectuals rather than the working class for whom they were intended. |
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In their presence, visitors become intellectuals and outsiders looking in. |
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These were the products of intellectuals, bishops, and churchmen who were nevertheless still connected with the diocesan and imperial courts, in some cases as chancellors. |
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It did not help matters that she would follow her sentences with a deep sniff, as if expecting to engage in an obnoxious breathing contest with Parisian intellectuals. |
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If you see the analysis of our vote, you'll see that most people were educated, middle-aged, intellectuals, with strong support too from young people. |
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As a general rule, however, military intellectuals tend to face mandatory retirement as lieutenant colonels or colonels, just as they are achieving full intellectual maturity. |
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The intellectuals could not prevent the masses from learning to read. |
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After 1848 plebeian intellectuals and activists in Ashton and other localities retreated into the quietist world of democratic dinners, lectures, and education. |
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In addition, the state itself is subject to the diverse cultural pressures and social fissures to which intellectuals, in their writings about folk religion, give voice. |
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She improvised, created and worked her vocal chords to a frazzle, dashed home and prepared dinner for the intellectuals who came repeatedly to Mrs Berio's table. |
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A great deal of 20th Century Communism can be derived from the fulminations of three or four generations of a small class of fulminating intellectuals. |
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They would compete to tear down government buildings, rip art galleries to shreds, and hold impromptu show trials for local Party officials, teachers or intellectuals. |
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All those French intellectuals have their Gallic noses stuck in a book. |
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In spite of the numbing silence of intellectuals of recent years, there are signs that the Arab world is beginning to break out of the vicious dead-end cycle. |
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The subversive element inherent in the deconstructive enterprise is another reason that it has exercised such a mesmerizing spell on intellectuals. |
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The subject remains controversial, with northern intellectuals having reopened in recent years the possibility of reviving a literary standard for the Gheg dialect. |
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This kind of attempt to demystify intellectuals and artists by relating them to objective social processes is in itself neither misguided nor new. |
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Let deracinated intellectuals on both sides move their distant masses in any which way that suits them, paying no attention whatever to the sentiments of those masses. |
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Nigerian intellectuals, in particular, and African intellectuals, in general, have also debated other alternative forms of democracy similar to diarchy. |
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Another task was to arouse awareness throughout society, especially the well-to-do and the intellectuals, of the direness of the plight of the poor and the destitute. |
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It was also patronised by eminent artists, musicians and intellectuals. |
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Borrowing heavily from Western empiricist thought, these intellectuals attacked all forms of traditional Chinese teachings, ritual, and institutions. |
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While Matthews might believe that we still have intellectuals pretending to be gunslingers, I am more convinced we have gunslingers pretending to be intellectuals. |
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In 1838 a small group of Spanish-speaking Dominican intellectuals from Santo Domingo organized a secret society called La Trinitaria to overthrow the Haitian rule. |
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During these meetings, which are mentioned by the author in this novel, Zairian intellectuals of the time refused to speak the same language. |
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Prominent intellectuals criticized it, most famously Lefranc de Pompignan at the French Academy. |
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There he had taught and been a major influence over Thomas Jefferson, and had formed the focus of a local group of intellectuals. |
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It was especially attractive to powerful aristocrats and politicians as well as intellectuals, artists and political activists. |
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Owen attempted to gain support for his socialist vision among American thinkers, reformers, intellectuals, and public statesmen. |
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He met famous theorists and intellectuals of the time, and was able to display his poetic skills. |
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In the early 20th century, many Chinese intellectuals argued that the country needed a standardized language. |
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Most work on the Enlightenment emphasizes the ideals discussed by intellectuals, rather than the actual state of education at the time. |
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The class of scholar officials and intellectuals, traditional bearers of elite Chinese culture, lost substantial social status. |
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The Republic of the Seven United Netherlands had become a home to many intellectuals, international businessmen, and religious refugees. |
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Historically, voters had been chosen from among tribal leaders, intellectuals, and businessmen. |
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Along with other Greek intellectuals, Posidonius favored Rome as the stabilizing power in a turbulent world. |
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European diplomats and intellectuals saw the Greek struggle for independence, with its accounts of Turkish atrocities, in a romantic light. |
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It was especially attractive to royalty, powerful aristocrats and politicians as well as intellectuals, artists and political activists. |
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The rediscovery of classical Greek and Roman knowledge had an enormous liberating effect on intellectuals. |
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Indeed, by the 16th century, emblems were adopted by intellectuals and merchants who had no heraldry of their own. |
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In recent years, a number of politicians and intellectuals have also penned memoirs or reflections on the country. |
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On these travels, he met a number of prominent European intellectuals and politicians. |
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Among his pupils were many of the dominant intellectuals of the Carolingian era. |
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This linguistic dynamism was reflected in the efforts of certain public intellectuals to counter the decline of the language. |
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Such an attitude was promoted by the scholarship of Romanticist intellectuals like Johann Gottfried Herder, Jacob Grimm, and Wilhelm Grimm. |
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Aside from politicians and diplomats, commentators and intellectuals also supported the war. |
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Truman, who distrusted Stalin and turned for advice to an elite group of foreign policy intellectuals. |
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Appalling conditions for workers, combined with support for the French Revolution turned some intellectuals to socialism. |
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This study of activists and plebeian intellectuals in Ashton-under Lyne suggests a different way of conceptualizing this crucial relationship. |
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For Zemmour, like many right-wing intellectuals, is a temporal irredentist, and the golden age for him lies in the heyday of Gaullist France. |
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The Enlightenment was nobiliary, and many of the Enlightenment intellectuals came from the aristocracy. |
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Protestants in Spain were estimated at between 1000 and 3000, mainly among intellectuals who had seen writings such as those of Erasmus. |
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I remember that in the late '60s a neo-Malthusian theory was popular among some intellectuals. |
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East Pakistani intellectuals crafted the Six Points which called for greater regional autonomy, free trade and economic independence. |
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However, a subtle shift took place in the way that intellectuals approached religion that was reflected in many other areas of cultural life. |
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Capitalism and especially its characterological incarnation, greed, remain the arch-evil for many self-respecting intellectuals. |
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The Irish philosopher and theologian Johannes Scotus Eriugena was considered one of the leading intellectuals of his early Middle Ages. |
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What these military intellectuals may have learned, according to Linn, is dependent on to which school of thought they belonged. |
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Bor county community chairman Ajuoi Magot, as well as various intellectuals, also attended the meeting. |
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Heitham Buddi, a scenarist stressed the role of intellectuals and scenarists in promoting integration of orphans into society. |
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Other contemporary Indian intellectuals such as Ashis Nandy have taken a more nuanced view of his work. |
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They are, in a sense, the intellectuals, the male hetaerae of our American commercial culture. |
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What troubles Arab intellectuals even more than the bastardisation of their language is that its use is declining, especially among the young. |
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With all due respect to Chinese intellectuals, many are political conservatives merely claiming reformism. |
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Second, a PhD isn't supposed to prepare you to be a public intellectual, even though it can help and many public intellectuals have them. |
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At about this time, Burke joined the circle of leading intellectuals and artists in London of whom Samuel Johnson was the central luminary. |
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He regarded the intellectuals as a disturbance to the Law by employing their literature, and thought that knights violate the prohibition of the state by using armed forces. |
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A lot of rather etiolated, epicene, middle-class, male intellectuals have discovered a new authenticity when they come to identify themselves as football fans. |
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And the rhapsodization by European intellectuals went on and on. |
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The United States, acting through the CIA, funded a long list of projects to counter the communist appeal among intellectuals in Europe and the developing world. |
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Stalinist regimes in the Eastern Bloc saw even marginal groups of opposition intellectuals as a potential threat because of the bases underlying Stalinist power therein. |
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Communist regimes in the Eastern Bloc viewed marginal groups of opposition intellectuals as a potential threat because of the bases underlying Communist power therein. |
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There he studied with some of the most acclaimed intellectuals in northern Europe, including Franciscus Junius, Joseph Justus Scaliger, and Rudolph Snellius. |
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For Lott, liberal boomer intellectuals such as Paul Berman and Todd Gitlin have betrayed the '60s legacy of radicalism to which all boomer liberals ought to pledge allegiance. |
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Sukman argues that since 1945, Protestantism has been widely seen by Koreans as the religion of the middle class, youth, intellectuals, urbanites, and modernists. |
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When postmodernism became sinicized, Chinese intellectuals modified its reaction against modernism by emphasizing the Western affiliation of these principals. |
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Metcalf shows that over the course of two centuries, British intellectuals and Indian specialists made the highest priority bringing peace, unity and good government to India. |
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Prominent intellectuals associated with the Liberal Party include the philosopher John Stuart Mill, the economist John Maynard Keynes, and social planner William Beveridge. |
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The group rapidly gained popularity amongst Anglican intellectuals, including Vera Brittain, Evelyn Underhill and former British political leader George Lansbury. |
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During the Reagan years, conservative intellectuals turned their attention to the Endowments, which they saw as the federal feedbox for liberalism. |
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The governmental system was supported by a large class of Confucian intellectuals selected through either civil service examinations or recommendations. |
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National myths have been created and propagated by national intellectuals, who have used them as instruments of political mobilization on demographic bases such as ethnicity. |
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Indeed, its leading intellectuals such as Edward Gibbon, Edmund Burke and Samuel Johnson were all quite conservative and supported of the standing order. |
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The leaders of the Enlightenment were not especially democratic, as they more often look to absolute monarchs as the key to imposing reforms designed by the intellectuals. |
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The issue of the Roma slavery became a theme in the literary works of various liberal and Romantic intellectuals, many of whom were active in the abolitionist camp. |
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The authority to arbitrate is in this case legitimized by superior knowledge to which intellectuals have a better access than the nonintellectual part of society. |
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However, in the realm of popular culture, yuanyang hudie novels influenced the colony's young intellectuals as well as film directors and producers. |
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Unfortunately, most of the Balkanian intellectuals, politicians, and linguists who could agree to give their common language one name are brainwashed nationalists. |
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Post services were founded all over Europe, which allowed a humanistic interconnected network of intellectuals across Europe, despite religious divisions. |
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In contrast to surrealism, an aesthetic effect produced by European rationalism, magical realism is a device used by Latin American intellectuals reacting to Eurocentrism. |
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The Greek language served as a lingua franca in the East and in Italy, and many Greek intellectuals such as Galen would perform most of their work in Rome. |
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Philosophers and intellectuals included Thomas More and Francis Bacon. |
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He was one of the few intellectuals who continued to offer his support to the FCL during the Algerian war when the FCL suffered severe repression and was forced underground. |
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The group rapidly gained popularity amongst Anglican intellectuals, including Vera Brittain, Evelyn Underhill, and the former British political leader George Lansbury. |
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As the Great Depression ground on and unemployment soared, intellectuals began unfavorably comparing their faltering capitalist economy to Russian Communism. |
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The apparent economic success of the Soviet Union at a time when the capitalist world was in crisis led many Western intellectuals to view the Soviet system favorably. |
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The emergence and growth of the Labour Party, a federation of trade unions with the socialist intellectuals of the ILP, helped its constituent parts develop and grow. |
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Schmidt tries to mingle with the art majors, but even with the politically correct artsy-fartsy intellectuals he seems to be having a hard time being accepted. |
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Many intellectuals, labour unions, artists and political parties worldwide have been influenced by Marx's work, with many modifying or adapting his ideas. |
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Ever since the 1948 nakba, Arab thinkers and intellectuals have been studying the causes of their condition and recommending ways for changing or improving it. |
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In other words, intellectuals exercise verbal gymnastics to discredit empirical evidence in order to give them an undeserved aura of sagaciousness. |
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Following this, some of the city's intellectuals formed the Select Society for Promoting the Reading and Speaking of the English Language in Scotland. |
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So many European intellectuals brandish the spectre of an Islamicized Europe following on the heels of Turkey's membership that one ends up frightened. |
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One project is a meticulous academic study bridging intellectual history and literary criticism by examining how Arab intellectuals and belletrists have dealt with sexuality. |
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During the interwar period, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a central figure in the influential Bloomsbury Group of intellectuals. |
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