The airport fills in as a liminal zone where one's own otherness becomes more visible, if not necessarily legible. |
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At death, the body enters upon a brief liminal stage which ends at the committal. |
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For children, the liminal space of play allows them to reconfigure power relationships, explore identities, and reframe actions. |
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We invite you to send us your thoughts, feelings, and rants concerning our liminal stage of personal and professional life. |
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The constant hum of the recitation may have been intended in part to induce a liminal state that was not entirely conscious. |
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As far as Russian folk belief is concerned, during this liminal period the body still retains some vestige of life. |
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This play between liminal and subliminal is an accustomed part of a novelist's technique. |
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The shojo is located as a liminal identity between childhood and adulthood. |
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The sea is the home of selkies, mermaids, these liminal creatures that slip back and forth between states as between elements. |
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The majority of Mexicans occupied a liminal position within the racial hierarchy of the southwestern states. |
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It's a book that's always beginning, where everything is introductory, liminal, prefatory. |
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The liminal position between tradition and adaptation has been described by Ralph Ellison as the quintessential American identity. |
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Her choice of only well-established older male theorists and her use of their work as foundational rather than liminal becomes suspect. |
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Facts about the direction of one's attention occupy a curiously liminal position in respect to the divide between the rational and the non-rational in our psychological lives. |
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It's like being in an underground car park, one of those liminal spaces where you feel slightly threatened and on your guard. |
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The propagated response, is identical when the intensities of stimulations remain liminal and supraliminal. |
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For many shamanistic cultures, this represents a liminal, or transitional state, and is often compared with the initiatory rites of shamans. |
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Only the thinnest of layers to obtain that satin chatoyancy, that liminal reflet. |
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Consequently, the liminal area is where everything banally described as creativity happens. |
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Minecraft is at that psychological cusp, that liminal zone between imagination and reality, between revery and action. |
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Migrants have as little certainty as artists that liminal experiments will have a positive outcome. |
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We have found ourselves in that liminal space between what is known and what is yet unknown, able only to listen and wait. |
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This liminal status is definitely the norm, and so must be acknowledged and dealt with in some manner by the academy. |
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The rheobase is the minimal liminal intensity for an impulse of long duration. |
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They have lived liminal experiences which reveal the mysterious action of God at many wells scattered along the roads they travel. |
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Anthropologists have frequently problematised the exciting, fraught and profoundly liminal stage that human beings traverse between childhood and adulthood. |
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We are in this transitional, liminal phase, of waiting to see what are the appropriate questions to be asking about human possibility and about the human condition. |
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They occupy the liminal space between us and other, civilization and barbarism, human and beast, the real and the imaginary, attraction and repulsion. |
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She removes herself to the liminal space of the hallway, a threshold to society from which she can assess her own status and avoid further assessment by others. |
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And the ordeal of initiation necessitates this brush with exotic death, for the liminal space in the journey of the rite of passage is about the annihilation of self. |
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How did television, then, in its liminal position on the borders of the home, narratively organize the spatial boundaries of inside and outside, local and global? |
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In addition, simply entering that liminal area in which guiding norms and structures are not given and creativity becomes an obligation does not guarantee success. |
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The article concludes with a brief consideration of the liminal significance of the Knossos Labyrinth's location on the island of Crete. |
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Indeed, much of this odd and wondrous opera, the work of Philip Glass and Robert Wilson, with some transcendent choreography from Lucinda Childs, seems to inhabit a liminal space, eerie and otherworldly. |
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Still, like the banking crisis which gave him a bounce last autumn, the expenses furore and the liminal feeling it has reinforced offer him a shot at redemption. |
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The poem would do for the window what theorists had done for the threshold: it would offer the idea of the fenestral as a consort to the idea of the liminal. |
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Kgositsile's poetics registers a liminal unboundedness that can work in the service of an open-ended universal human made up of particulars. |
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It was a liminal zone to the Chinese, an awesome threshold to be crossed: a place of high turbulence, thanks to the Kuroshio churning along the edge of the shelf. |
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Because bats are mammals, yet can fly, they are liminal beings in many traditions. |
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This project focuses on an in-between, liminal or interstitial space. |
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And 'Postscript', which finds the liminal in the experience of driving 'along the Flaggy Shore', with 'the ocean on one side. |
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This is a strange, liminal object: a maypole bedecked with slim red and black ribbons and chains from which hang aluminium plaques bearing grisly two-dimensional images of severed heads. |
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In the East, holiness could inhabit the living: ascetics like the stylites could occupy the liminal space between the corrupt world and the pure one. |
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Just like artists, transnational nomads enter a liminal area. |
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The latter celebrates the liminal period in nature's seasonal cycle. The biblical week of pilgrimage, however, was devoid of the mythopoeic dramatization of the primordial event determining the cosmic order. |
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The liminal movement begins with Celie's face to face meeting with Shug Avery. |
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The very lively and fractious holiness press and holiness gatherings provided liminal spaces where blacks and whites could interact, even though local hostility was often powerful enough to hold back moves to integration. |
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In this perspective, the exhibition becomes a true medium for resistance, and art a liminal zone to test other ideas, other spaces, other economies. |
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A graduation ceremony might be regarded as liminal, while a rock concert might be understood to be liminoid. |
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Referred to as Daft Days by the Galoshin mummers in Scotland, this was a liminal period when normal conventions were in abeyance and abnormal conduct was permitted. |
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It's all about consubstantiality or identification, which is not a state but a process of becoming that takes place in the liminal space between poet and poetized. |
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