These films consisted of a series of music hall acts and slapstick set pieces, loosely linked by very limited narratives. |
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But the Genesis narratives are appropriate as well to Mary and cleansing, especially in a Marian chapel. |
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Such childhood-beating narratives play an important part in Freud's interpretation of sadistic and masochistic personalities. |
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These stories tell the essential narratives of our lives, and they are intimately linked with art. |
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This form, music video, paired popular songs with series of incoherent images held together by thin narratives. |
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In doing so, he reveals the intimate connection between liberal narratives of race and the discourse of American exceptionalism. |
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In his sixth novel, Harvey layers narratives and characters on top of one another. |
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Further, self-centeredness, self-consciousness, and self-contradiction are not wholly reducible to self-delusion in these narratives. |
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Such grand narratives frequently obscure the sequence of events they are struggling to explain. |
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So in other words, they're using the biblical gospel narratives in a symbolic way in these novels. |
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An event occurs, and it slowly becomes encrusted with narratives about what happened. |
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They opt instead for narratives that tell half of the story and narratives that tell an untrue story. |
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Many narratives have also been written in more conventional language and forms by Aboriginal authors. |
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We are even more dependent on Rose's selectivity with the pool of first-person narratives. |
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Their interacting narratives alternate, interpenetrate, and finally coalesce in the culminating moment of the Messiah episode. |
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Similarly, he acknowledges that the slave narratives were always survivors' stories. |
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These were Maori narratives written and read from the position of living in a European country. |
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He contends that the mass media help to spread the narratives of history and everyday life which bind people together as a nation. |
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Though carefully documented, the book primarily weaves strong narratives filled with lively anecdotes. |
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These various narratives are weaved in with combat footage and historical analysis. |
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Altogether there are thirty-three narratives and twenty-two opinion statements. |
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Can it really be right to have children when they'll grow up in a world dominated by narratives of social and environmental catastrophe? |
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All of these narratives unfold partly as dialogues with what seem to be sympathetic but ineffectual interlocutors, perhaps lawyers. |
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Official American history diminishes or erases completely these bodies in its ideal narratives of progress. |
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Journalists may love to break news, but they hate to contradict the narratives that crystallize around particular politicians or policies. |
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Through his constant narrativizing, Ambrose constructs a portrait of himself as a fiction and his narratives constitute his selfhood. |
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The narratives tend to focus on family members left behind, in states of bemused and angry grief. |
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How does the story you tell in this book fit with larger narratives in the history of clocks and timekeeping? |
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The broad themes of these narratives mesh with those in the sections on contemporary Africa and the Diaspora. |
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Like accounts of practical jokes, such narratives focus on issues of belief, beguilers, and the beguiled. |
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As in most recovery narratives, the road to sobriety leads crookedly but fatefully to rehab. |
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A sense of hope pervaded all 17 narratives, and for some this was closely linked to fear. |
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The artwork has to be able to point towards new perspectives and formulate new possibilities and new narratives. |
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Most frequently Sukuma figures are used to satirize character types, create narratives with invented characters, or simulate sexual relations. |
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The Italian fabulist's book sets up a series of interrupted narratives that it doesn't take up. |
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Needless to say this evidence was used to refute the view that the gospel narratives are irresponsible fabrications. |
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On the other hand, these narratives may reflect popular perceptions of a historical reality. |
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We have to resist engagement in the concoction of large inspiriting narratives, because they so easily seduce in fantasy or ideology. |
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He used ancient, classical, and contemporary collections of travel narratives, which were closest in scholarly method to English antiquarianism. |
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The storytelling of the legal documents is replaced by the prefaces and narratives of the pamphleteers. |
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He has written incisive lyrics, narratives, meditations and satires in verse that is both commanding and supple. |
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The origin and historicity of many of the details of the infancy narratives in Matthew and in Luke are much disputed. |
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Novels are narratives of private life that they turn inward, forming subjectivities that occlude or mystify the political. |
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These include native law texts as well as heroic prose narratives and intricately crafted rhymed verse in hundreds of different meters. |
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Anthropology, our source of narratives of otherness, has a professional bias towards difference. |
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These recent novels and memoirs figure their narratives of origin as centrally connected to the 1915 genocide. |
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Because the narratives are orally transmitted, variation in content is inevitable. |
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Because these narratives were performed orally, most of them have been lost. |
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Memorates and personal narratives are something else, however, and she has a store of such narratives. |
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There are many heartbreaking narratives from families whose loved ones have died of mental illnesses. |
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The book then goes on to present capsule narratives of specific aspects of agricultural production and particular sectors. |
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The biblical narratives of the Old Testament together with other texts that never made it into the canon provide useful background. |
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Despite the stasis of the couples' narratives, however, a kind of catharsis seems finally to take place. |
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At heart, she's a Victorian novelist writing long, complex narratives with multiple plots and well-developed characters. |
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Her dances are notated and recalled through the narratives that underlie the process, rather than specific movements. |
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I stress the fact that travel is a non-linear experience, and that travel narratives written in a non-linear way are generally the most engaging. |
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I was thinking more along the lines of composing these non-linear narratives. |
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The cavernous spin room is already crackling with narratives and counternarratives. |
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Though one does not usually think of scholarly variorums as narratives, they in fact are. |
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There are varied poetic forms, including narratives, jazz poems, slam poems, sestina, haiku, couplets and sonnets. |
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While most of his songs work through classic folk narratives, Gaughan doesn't believe in some mythical mist-soaked never-never land. |
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In semi-retirement Xenophon wrote historical narratives, Socratic texts, and miscellaneous technical and political works. |
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Some scholars have linked the introduction of narratives with oral epics current in the 8th century. |
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Travel narratives suggest that many well-to-do European and American travelers were appalled by the mixing of social classes. |
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Their narratives were accounts of how a democratic state had been achieved. |
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The Diablo games haven't exactly carved out their niche in gaming history with their rich, enthralling narratives. |
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Their readings have roots in and derive their stimulus from historical and political schema of dissent outlined in the biblical narratives. |
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The narratives do not differ in any substantial manner but the style derived from the Nahuatl one is striking. |
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Another favorite device is the making of narratives that unfold the spatial organization of pictures. |
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The complex large-scale forms of serious music unfold their narratives in time with an authority that cannot be hurried. |
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For most Americans, it appears, the Biblical account of the endtimes continues to resonate because there are few competing narratives. |
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But the way typical narratives are set up, there's no room for philosophy, because it's just digressive material. |
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Short Books' excellent series of biographies has shown that accessibly delivered narratives can attract an enthusiastic readership. |
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Thus, accidents or chance events function as sites around which narratives of individual difference can collocate. |
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Ballads are most often first-person narratives told in rhyming quatrains of Hiberno-English, and dealing with matters such as love and war. |
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He looks at the Gospel's theology, language, and relationship of narratives to Jesus' discourses and explores the unique Johannine Passion story. |
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The narratives repeat images of humiliation, brutality, and the sheer randomness of tragedy among people who have few allies and fewer options. |
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The genre of the sports spectacle is particularly effective in producing such narratives. |
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And some of the Dreaming narratives associated with these works are pretty raunchy! |
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The author masterfully captures the narratives by using humor, raw language and thought-provoking descriptions. |
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Important spheres of local public life fell outside of the purview of most scholarly narratives. |
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Surrounded by an introduction and an afterword, the narratives are organized into three sections, with a small prelude to each section. |
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I do not wish to suggest that our reading of these narratives can be closed or definitive. |
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However, if the narratives make a claim for social realism, then they also acknowledge the limits of realism as a representational mode. |
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As in a disaster movie, the lives are depicted as parallel narratives, hinged on the impending disaster. |
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Pairs generally include pieces of contrasting mood and agogic character, while larger groups offer more intricate narratives. |
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In a philosophical prolegomenon, Schmidt examines twin interpretive narratives that, he argues, have obscured the study of modern hearing. |
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In this respect, the narratives show the masters as individuals who struggle with the moral problems posed by slaveholding. |
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That decision reflects a reasonable economy of force, especially as the necessary points are clearly illustrated in the battle narratives. |
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The author reads them as narratives of resistance to the received wisdom of the health educators. |
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In the midst of these factual recitations are narratives of great interest. |
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Eggleston was combining elements in his immediate surroundings and recombining them to form new narratives. |
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She had, for instance, several narratives about the ghost of an unburied child. |
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Miller's history unfortunately perpetuates rather than problematizes such narratives. |
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The ghost of his splits hang over Bigger than Blue, but it never slips into woebegone narratives or diatribes. |
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Its publications include reissues and re-editions of Hakluyt's writings, and very many original narratives. |
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Yet even in these reconstructive narratives, each solution is heavily problematized, placed under scrutiny and found wanting. |
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In addition to these compelling narratives, the chapters include numerous references and a section of reflections, questions, and exercises. |
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His narratives, in which he translates current events, are too allegorical to be history, yet too mutable to be myth. |
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His narratives usually lend themselves to rich allegorical readings, and Tsui can be a very skilful allegorist when he wants to be. |
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It is these declinist narratives that are responsible for stirring up skepticism. |
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The power of such sites to genuinely support public memory narratives, rather than simply freezing the past, is very much at issue everywhere. |
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Its contents consist largely of warnings, remonstrances, assertions, arguments in favor of certain doctrines, narratives for enforcing morals. |
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An escape from slavery is an expansion of experience and cultural consciousness, one that fugitive slave narratives record repeatedly. |
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Open-ended narratives are pieced together from fragments of description and overheard conversations. |
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Talk of renewing the armed struggle was a common theme that animated the narratives. |
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The Torah comprises the first five books and contains a mixture of narratives and legal texts. |
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Conflict is then almost endemic to a good story, and literature, mythology, folk tales, and even religious texts are full of violent narratives. |
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He reworks sound and video movement to produce alternative historical narratives. |
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Apple manipulates several narratives to continue to make its products interesting fodder for journalists. |
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There are terse and objective descriptions of observed phenomena, apothegmatic passages, riddles and allegories, as well as fanciful narratives. |
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Cutting between narratives with various video montages, the film is visually breathtaking. |
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Studies of Scottish popular belief in the trials have hitherto emphasised narratives. |
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Her self-imposed mission is to find her mother's estranged brother, and it doesn't take rocket science to see where the two narratives converge. |
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And so it is that this triptych of narratives involves prophetic individuals seeking a mystical connection with the world through creation. |
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These narratives were overblown exaggerations, but polemicists employed their hyperbole to further political ends. |
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However, sophisticated readers have always been able to track and utilize rapidly changing points of view in print narratives. |
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By taking on these sympathetic forms, literary biography can supply parallel narratives to those of novels. |
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Specific, sometimes microscopic, detail is used here, too, in a kind of a cinematic structure cutting back and forth between the two narratives. |
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This plot structure question and gradual answer works well for longer narratives, and it can work for flash fiction, too. |
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The book follows the story of Jesus from the genealogies in Matthew and Luke to the Passion narratives. |
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Specific, often microscopic detail is discussed but supports the parallel narratives. |
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Shapiro does not offer monologues or narratives but poetic dramas in which multiple voices are allowed on the stage. |
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After the interviewees finished, we then asked open-ended questions meant to clarify contrastive reasoning and elicit narratives. |
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America presents two contradictory narratives that it struggles to reconcile. |
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Edie Windsor, by which I mean, poster children for the cause with compelling mainstream narratives. |
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It is this kind of abstraction that leads to more mythology, more heroic narratives, more undertones of patriotic martyrdom. |
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There are slideshows, graphics, interactive maps, heartbreaking narratives, anguished family members. |
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Because my passion so far has been exposing government-funded sacred cows and disrupting statist narratives, I am an apostate. |
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Plus, on cable you no longer have to whitewash the story and appease the masses, so the narratives are getting more interesting. |
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Antin has made a career of storytelling in films, photographs and performances that present engaging narratives of quests, masquerades and waking dreams. |
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Wonderfully constructed narratives, such as the patriarchal stories of Genesis, are reduced and abridged as to make many of them incomprehensible. |
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As Sides shows, the familiar narratives of black hyper-segregation, white flight, and concomitant deindustrialization don't fit the story of twentieth-century Los Angeles. |
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These subversive narratives were not the solution I sought to the dissonance between my expected and actual college experience. |
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Key to the success of such narratives is the existence of a disenfranchised population who want to be liberated and can be re-imagined as legitimate wielders of state power. |
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In this case, the narratives tend to have a less univocally negative or agonistic flavor and reflect both the triumphs and tribulations of an individual's life experiences. |
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More than anyone he set the stage for the dazzling dominance of genre narratives in our own time. |
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Should research prompt a critical reevaluation of historical narratives? |
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Others, myself included, have discussed celebrity as a kind of art, providing narratives that reify themes and ideas in the culture much the way myths do. |
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It featured mostly new releases, all films that in one way or another relied on narratives that explored people who were either on the move or had ended up in faraway places. |
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Likewise, child readers of the biographies were implicitly encouraged to identify their present with the past represented in the narratives they read. |
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A pupil of Domenichino, he was most in sympathy with classical art, but he also appreciated the Baroque, and enriched his narratives with anecdote and vivid detail. |
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First-person animal narratives, such as Black Beauty, are overtly anthropomorphic fantasies and cannot operate within or even congruent to the framework of natural science. |
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Historic pennant races make for compelling narratives, none more fantastic than the fairy tale 2004 Red Sox season. |
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Her exceptional use of tone in the aquatints enriches the etchings and adds, in a moving and dramatic way, to the narratives that are always her main drive. |
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Like electronic media, your eye keeps flicking back and forth over the images trying to decipher them, creating little associative narratives in your mind. |
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She had had a couple of narratives about Sami shamans, noaidies, so she was asked if it was a fact that some people had the ability to inflict evil on others. |
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For instance, the sacred texts of many religions offer compelling narratives which, at their best, can promote ethical reflection and a sense of shared experience. |
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This suggests that the sexual aspect of the narratives was largely a trope for the strong desires that were central to both malefic witchcraft and the Evil Eye. |
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Apocalyptic narratives of nations, immersed in teleological arguments, necessarily introduce the problem of majorities and minorities, of insiders and outsiders. |
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The Canvas By Benjamin Stein Two interlocking narratives drive toward the heart of a mystery about memory and identity. |
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They are so matter-of-fact about it all that you never really get the sense of desperation or abjection that we're used to seeing in heroin narratives. |
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His prose narratives, too, were bestsellers till the 18th century. |
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The Louisiana chief executive is impossible to dismiss out of hand because he fits into several narratives that make him appealing to conservatives and to independent voters. |
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For, until they are schooled into learning the story of their nation states, children have other illuminating narratives about how they came into being. |
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When I want to think deeply, I write out my thoughts as long-form narratives or do mind mapping on my computer. |
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Howard Kurtz examines the nasty narratives, pitting Mr. Ineffectual against Mr. moneybags. |
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The average reader, he declares, is but an unwitting receptacle for media narratives. |
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The impeachment issue is driving campaign narratives even in the relatively liberal precincts of New England. |
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She is known for stories with strong visual narratives, interesting secondary characters, accurate historical detail and love scenes with lots of sizzle. |
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If a book promises to provide a close-up and personal view of war, then unexpurgated oral histories rather than casual third-person narratives are much to be preferred. |
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All three retread familiar themes and narratives by their respective filmmakers, and use an exact, refined visual style that is unfussy and deceptively simple. |
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Perhaps this fact, coupled with the ungraspable enormity of the tragedy, will now compel us to look beyond Hollywood for our narratives and metaphors. |
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One can speak of a general hesitation before universalizing discourses as characteristic of the late-modern anxiety about narratives and systems of value. |
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Judging from settler letters and narratives, resettlement to the eastern borderlands did not produce radical change in the way that peasants defined themselves. |
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But because they have lived through colonial and totalitarian regimes, they are untrusting and contemptuous of those impressive-sounding grand narratives. |
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Closer to neo-realism, but excluded from it in a number of ways, were war narratives which went too far beyond the template of Resistance-dominated, committed writing. |
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Lastman, especially, was admired for his clear narratives and classicizing, archaeologically veristic settings, and his attentive reading of classical sources. |
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These open narratives are luscious representations of mundane non-events. |
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Smith's fearsomely focused narratives and majestically brutal accompaniment are alternately highlighted or hamstrung by perverse and frustrating production decisions. |
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They parse sentences until a parable's plot crumbles into fragments, or they so domesticate the narratives that they become little more than helpful hints for daily living. |
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In conceptualism, these biographical narratives, tightly connected to both the text and image components, became an explicit part of the work's content. |
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Up from Slavery is a compelling literary event because Washington successfully weds his rags-to-riches story with narratives of racial conciliation and uplift. |
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Overall, these individual narratives were insightfully blended together, resulting in an extremely coherent though complex and conceptually strong exhibition. |
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Autohistory, as a selective and subjective process, recognizes the constitutive function of memory work in the construction of historical narratives. |
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Reading the narratives, one is left with the sense that the choice to abstain from all sexual involvements was more emotionally driven for women than for men. |
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The narratives employed in their counterstories demonstrate further these presidents' emotional intelligence as conceptualized by Gardner and Goleman. |
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Catalogue images produced new therapeutic narratives for the type of men whom Hine posed on Pittsburgh streets and framed as helpless, futureless victims. |
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As such, the game narratives are more like modern renditions of radical folk tales that question the explicit power structure by presenting an alternate structure. |
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Such narratives decenter national black protest organizations and their local branches, lending greater attention to indigenous, unaffiliated groupings. |
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Conventional art history narratives tend to propagate the idea that important art happens elsewhere, either outside Canada or in limited regions within the country. |
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The only way that this can be achieved, it seems, is by the wilful and purposeful appropriation of Aboriginal narratives by non-indigenous Australians. |
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Much as he deplores the disembodiment he finds at the heart of dying-to-know narratives, some kind of self-denial, he decides, is essential for the good, if not the true. |
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By doing so, he positions himself within the borderlands he studies, and as an actor and enunciator of narratives that rupture colonialist forces at work under new guises. |
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The narratives also perform the therapeutic exercise of exorcising the past, of integrating it in memory, thus forming a bridge between past and present. |
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In these narratives across different times and places, the reader seems to be both traveling through the tunnel of time and having an exotic experience in a foreign land. |
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Dramatizations of his novels were staged even before the final parts appeared, and the narratives he created now yield us films, television serials, and musicals. |
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And interwoven between all these are Colley's captives, a dramatis personae whose names and narratives gradually imprint themselves upon the reader as in a good novel. |
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It would be extremely interesting to find out how these children mix both perfective and imperfective aspect in narratives. |
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In place of phallocentrism, the narratives preoccupy us with the gynomania of brown Sello's Medusa. |
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On the one hand, it contains three implied narratives of each of the three divine engenderings. |
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In narratives, discontinuative predicate focus is used when there is a topic shift, or when two referents are contrasted. |
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They rely more on the strength of their ideas than barnburner narratives. |
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Indeed, this is what Ian Watt sees as distinguishing the novel from earlier prose narratives. |
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Cohan, and others used song in narratives that often reflected themes of hope and ambition. |
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And thus, we can perhaps makes some sense of the narratives he reads as mise en abymes of his own desires. |
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National symbols, anthems, myths, flags and narratives were assiduously constructed by nationalists and widely adopted. |
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Once analytic units have been identified, the researcher will often combine the narratives of individual participants into a metastory. |
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Blyton had an interest in biblical narratives, and retold Old and New Testament stories. |
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Classes will include various media projects such as Claymation, documentaries, music making, film making, and personal recorded narratives. |
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His plots were carefully constructed, and he often wove elements from topical events into his narratives. |
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The sense of witnessing a classic dramatic tragedy is suggested by the hint of catharsis in the separate narratives the siblings present. |
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Similarly, they protest that the same analysis misderives prosecutorial norms and narratives from governing ethics rules and standards. |
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The postmodern deconstructs the metanarratives of the Western tradition, leaving us with a plurality of narratives and values. |
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In short, we must be satisfied with Garza's brief summations which, on examination, often do not concur with the narratives. |
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That the narratives themselves are so ludicrously one-gendered? |
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It acquired a cult following because, like all good narratives, it grappled with complex archetypes through artistic symbolisation. |
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However, for men low in endorsement of TMI, partner abundance narratives resulted, counterintuitively, in diminished romantic confidence. |
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Then in the New Testament, Christ incarnates the metanarrative of God's Truth that explains all other narratives and metanarratives. |
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It is a scripturally complex painting, drawing on Leviticus 14 and the temptation narratives in the Gospel of. |
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For example, some of the court case narratives are interesting for their use of rhetoric. |
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These broadside ballads were in some cases newly fabricated but were mostly adaptions of the older verse narratives. |
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Women's narratives are also necessary to appreciate genderized practices ostensibly rooted in culture or religion. |
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The documentation and narratives address outstanding issues, risks and any initial design remediation that may be required. |
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The Katha Upanishad and Bhagavad Gita present narratives where the student criticizes the teacher's inferior answers. |
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Flackery requires putting together credible narratives from pools of verifiable data. |
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On the contrary, he admits the inherent referentiality of the gospel narratives, but only on their own terms. |
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Some traditional song narratives recall supernatural events or mysterious deaths. |
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Analagous to canonical narratives of pilgrimage, both sacred and secular, they depicted the journey of the 'wise fool' dressed as a pilgrim. |
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Displays in the chapel record the archaeological findings in pictures and narratives. |
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Such insights are solidified in evolutionary criticism, where narratives and art are seen as adaptational strategies. |
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Can misogynistic and baseless tabloid narratives go out of style? |
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Not since the heady days of twentieth-century diffusionism has human mobility become such a prominent feature of archaeological narratives. |
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Three major academic narratives of Edward have been produced during this period. |
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There are a lot of aggravating myths and narratives in politics. |
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The voices of recondite writers quoted at length, forgotten storytellers weaving narratives, obscure scholars savaging one another. |
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Many liberals prefer to read Jesus' miracles as metaphorical narratives for understanding the power of God. |
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Crammed with gossip, anecdotes, and confessions..., his garrulous, untidy narratives read like a good novel. |
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Instead, national narratives and iconographies very rapidly began to focus on the cult of the proceres, often while they were still living. |
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To that end, while hardly unempirical or even all that theoretical, they rely on strong narratives that actually historicize the facts. |
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The sea's name appeared in George Windsor Earl's 1837 Sailing Directions for the Arafura Sea which he compiled from the narratives of Lieuts. |
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All travel narratives from this time used the same sources, taken from each other or from the earlier traditions of the Greeks. |
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The ideological dimension, according to Steger, is filled with a range of norms, claims, beliefs, and narratives about the phenomenon itself. |
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Much RPF is about celebrities' private relationships, just as most soap opera narratives concern characters' private relationships. |
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The Classic of History is one of the Five Classics of Chinese classic texts and one of the earliest narratives of China. |
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Extremely popular in the 13th and 14th Century, the narratives of these lengthy versions vary in detail from manuscript to manuscript. |
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Reprinting ensured that historians remained objective, and that the grand pirate narratives remained intact. |
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During the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, narratives of sea captains and pirate adventures took many forms. |
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The English became familiar with captivity narratives written by Barbary pirates' prisoners and ransomed captives, as so many people were taken. |
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Although only scraps of the Orphic narratives survive, they show interesting differences with the Hesiodic tradition. |
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These narratives focus on human actors, with only occasional intervention from deities but a pervasive sense of divinely ordered destiny. |
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The Romans usually treated their traditional narratives as historical, even when these have miraculous or supernatural elements. |
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The titles applied to Jesus, along with the ascension narratives, link Jesus to the divinized emperor. |
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The animal was seen as a source of food among the Ancient Greeks, as well as a sporting challenge and source of epic narratives. |
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The narratives of traditional songs often also remember folk heroes such as John Henry or Robin Hood. |
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Most of the stories are frame narratives, written from Watson's point of view as summaries of the detective's most interesting cases. |
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Early historical narratives of captured colonial Europeans, including perspectives of literate women captured by the indigenous peoples of North America, exist in some number. |
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Many contemporary films rely on ancient myths to construct narratives. |
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As museums in the United States have become increasingly more digitized, curators find themselves constructing narratives in both the material and digital worlds. |
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These narratives record that Jesus was walking along the shore of the Sea of Galilee, observed Simon and Andrew fishing, and called them to discipleship. |
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The fall of David Moyes has been one of the season's most enduring narratives but can we make a few quid from an educated guess at where he might resurface? |
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They replace such narratives with stories of the itinerancy of their embodiments and the itinerant situatedness of disability in its relation to dependency and heteronomy. |
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The makings of this master narrative are all present in Morris's book, and perhaps popularizers will make use of his research to give us narratives of this sort. |
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But his speech also points to the importance, in martyrological narratives, of sharing the experience of that sacrifice in order to better understand its value. |
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The complex connection between the two figures, the mother and the cry, is established in Duras' narratives through a certain oral pulsivity of the text. |
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On the other hand, vernacular art expressions can also be integrated into art historical narratives, in which case they are usually referred to as folk arts or craft. |
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This question arose due to the discrepancy between the narratives of the Stroganov Chronicle and a different Siberian chronicle, the Yespiov Chronicle. |
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Introducing women into the story who are not part of the historical record, Shelley uses their narratives to question established theological and political institutions. |
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Enumerative analysis of the documents allowed the researchers to look at word frequency, average length of narratives, and Flesch-Kincaid readability level. |
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It is a matter of much debate among historians to which degree, or whether at all, these narratives about this legendary Toltec ruler describe historical events. |
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Popslash writers use pop stars as their protagonists, constructing fictional narratives that supplement and enhance those disseminated by the media. |
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For instance, she calls our attention to the distinction, introduced as long ago as 1968 by the German scholar Roland Harweg, between emic and etic openings of narratives. |
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Jacob Korg believes that Thomas's fiction work can be classified into two main bodies, vigorous fantasies in a poetic style and, after 1939, more straightforward narratives. |
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The result is a proliferation of fanworks that explore narratives of transgression as fans play with the permissibility of Supernatural's supernatural world. |
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Hockney also began to incorporate narratives into his photo collages. |
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The history of dissent, and the experiences of racial minorities and disadvantaged classes was central to the narratives produced by New Left historians. |
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During holidays at Haworth, she wrote long narratives while being reproached by her father who wanted her to become more involved in parish affairs. |
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After concluding the case studies, a survey of techniques not discussed in detail is provided, as well as hypnotic induction and the author's favorite facilitative narratives. |
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With numerous conflicting narratives regarding Muhammad and his companions from various sources, it was necessary to verify which sources were more reliable. |
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A good number of other poems in the eddic style are recorded elsewhere, very often inserted into prose narratives dealing with the exploits of legendary heroes. |
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This is the problem with first-person narratives, the ninth letter of the English alphabet and nominative case form of the first person singular pronoun often is overused. |
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Layering is the piling on of connections or additional narratives that sustain and support the flow, while offering complementing or contrapunctal voices. |
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Such ideologies of shared characteristics are often perpetuated in the form of powerful, compelling narratives that give legitimacy and continuity to the set of shared values. |
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Sass compared madness, specifically schizophrenia, and modernism in a less fascist manner by noting their shared disjunctive narratives, surreal images, and incoherence. |
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This volume's 14 papers by various international authors together create powerful narratives of a politicised, naturalised and universalised concept of scarcity. |
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Archaic Roman religion, at least concerning the gods, was made up not of written narratives, but rather of complex interrelations between gods and humans. |
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Certainly other Afrikaners understood the Boer women's narratives as revealing exactly the conditions Tierney-Tello describes as the stuff of testimonio. |
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In brief, narratology is the study of how narratives work, especially regarding point of view, deixis, and the role of the narrator within the text. |
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The result is a series of narratives which cannot be reconciled. |
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At the same time, we overread. That is, we find in narratives qualities, motives, moods, ideas, judgments, even events for which there is no direct evidence in the discourse. |
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Most of the sections, after the portion Bereshit expound biblical narratives, notably the deeds of the patriarchs, as allegories of the fate of the soul. |
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