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fictional and treatment
Neal Stephenson's novel Cryptonomicon ( 1999 ) also contains a fictional treatment of the historical role played by Turing and Bletchley Park.
A nonfiction essay that is embedded in There Will Be Time and attributed to the book's fictional protagonist, but seems to reflect Anderson's own views, sharply criticizes the American Left of 1972 ( when it was written ) for two instances of a double standard: for neglecting to address human rights violations in the Soviet Union and for failing to notice Israel's treatment of the Palestinians.
The Eye in the Door concentrates, for the most part, on Rivers's treatment of the fictional character of Prior.
Most of Dickens ' other critiques in this particular novel concern the social safety net: industry and the treatment and safety of workers ; the bureaucracy of the British Treasury ( as figured in the fictional " Circumlocution Office " 1, Ch.
The Communist government also attempted to improve the treatment of Manchu people ; some Manchu people who had hidden their ancestry during the period of KMT rule thus became more comfortable to reveal their ancestry, such as the writer Lao She, who began to include Manchu characters in his fictional works in the 1950s ( in contrast to his earlier works which had none ).
This idea was given a fictional treatment by popular AP writer Hal Boyle on July 9 with his story " Trip on a Flying Saucer.
Perhaps the most influential fictional treatment of Kasper Hauser was Jakob Wassermann's 1908 novel Caspar Hauser oder Die Trägheit des Herzens (" Caspar Hauser or the Inertia of the Heart "), which was largely responsible for its popularization in Germany.
* For a fictional treatment of the lives of Catholics in England in the 20th century, see the novels of David Lodge, in particular The British Museum Is Falling Down and How Far Can You Go ?.
If a fictional treatment costs a total of GBP 45, 000 at today's value and increases a person's quality of life ( QoL ) from 0. 5 to 0. 6 for the remainder of their life from age 70 and onwards, and their expected lifespan increases from 73 to 75.
In 2008 she returned to fiction writing with the publication of The Spare Room, a fictional treatment of caring for a dying cancer patient, based on the illness and death of Garner's friend Jenya Osborne.
* 1991: Stolen Away by Max Allan Collins is a thorough treatment of the case from the point of view of a fictional detective.
The book was a fictional treatment of the familiar Billy the Kid story, relocated from New Mexico to the Monterey Peninsula in California.
* Bernard Glemser's Radar Commandos ( 1966 ), is a fictional treatment of the raid.
from issue # 58, advertising a fictional fitness exercise treatment, and the Bexhill theatre playbill from issue # 60, advertising a fictional circus show, including such " famous " performers as Miss Kempley Toog, Disturbo, Hettie O ' Jings and The Amazing Sweffo.
In this way, Gaiman presents, in fictional form, a critique of Lewis ' treatment of Susan.
Such an ousting of the band by an organist is given a fictional treatment in Thomas Hardy ’ s early novel Under the Greenwood Tree, which reflected actual events at Hardy ’ s church at Stinsford.
* Western writer Zane Grey included a fictional treatment of the Gnadenhutten Massacre in his 1906 historical novel " Spirit of the Border ".
A fictional treatment of the dystopian project to carry out the Abolition of Man is a theme of Lewis's novel That Hideous Strength.
In part three of the book, " Dylarama ," Gladney discovers that Babette has been cheating on him in order to gain access to a fictional drug called Dylar, an experimental treatment for the fear of death.
* Crime fiction, the fictional treatment of crimes and their detection and criminals and their motives
However, expatriate American novelist and journalist William Gardner Smith's 1963 novel The Stone Face, is now recognized as the earliest known fictional treatment of the events surrounding this infamous event.
The role of Polycrates is one item in the debate over whether Xenophon's treatment of Socrates reflects the historical Socrates, or is a largely fictional contribution to the literary debate about Socrates.
A fictional treatment of the device, out decades before the device itself, can be found in the novel The Terminal Man.

fictional and these
She and her surviving siblings — Branwell, Emily, and Anne – created their own literary fictional worlds, and began chronicling the lives and struggles of the inhabitants of these imaginary kingdoms.
The locations where these adventures occur, such as a city, country, planet or an entire fictional universe, are also sometimes called ' campaigns ' but are more correctly referred to as ' worlds ' or ' campaign settings '.
To see a list of these emperors, see Category of fictional emperors and empresses.
Often these books follow a formula where the first chapter involves Brown solving a case at the dinner table for his father, the local police chief in the fictional town of Idaville.
By analogy with the word " conlang ", the term conworld is used to describe these fictional worlds, inhabited by fictional constructed cultures.
Internet-based fictional languages are hosted along with their " conworlds " on the Internet, and based at these sites, becoming known to the world through the visitors to these sites ; Verdurian, the language of Mark Rosenfelder's Verduria on the planet of Almea, is a flagship Internet-based fictional language.
Doctors Baikouzis and Magnasco state that " he odds that purely fictional references to these phenomena ( so hard to satisfy simultaneously ) would coincide by accident with the only eclipse of the century are minute.
While these latter accounts are common among martial artists, and often serve as origin stories for various martial arts styles, they are viewed by scholars as fictional.
There are ritualistic aspects and elements taken directly from vaudeville and there is a danger in making more of these than what they are: that is, merely structural conveniences, avatars into which the writer places his fictional characters.
... in the madness of statements by these artificially-lit establishment figures quoting the official doctrine of the day, or in the madness of the staged and fictional scenes from the rest of my film, which presented the consequences of their utterances ?”
The fictional characters of these books are portrayed as real-life entities who live in a refuge on Mars.
In some historical fiction, famous events appear from points of view not recorded in history, with fictional characters either observing or actively participating in these actual events.
Many films have been created which attempt to use a historic event or setting as a backdrop and actors portray fictional or historical figures set in these events.
In these he follows the course of European history from the 1920s through the Second World War, including real characters and events — such as Hitler's escape following the abortive Munich putsch — as well as fictional.
Other examples of this phenomenon include the records by fictional groups the Archies and Josie & the Pussycats, produced by Don Kirshner and Danny Jansen respectively, who were contracted by TV production companies to produce these records to promote the animated children's TV series of the same name.
However, these endeavours, real and fictional, are not representative of modern archaeology
In these fictional works he is featured with an overly large nose, which people would travel from miles around to see.
Although this volume is notable for featuring imagined histories by serious historians, the histories are presented in narrative form ( in most cases with a fairly whimsical tone ) without any analysis of the reasoning behind these scenarios, so they fall short of modern standards for serious counterfactual history and are closer to the fictional alternate history genre.
One of the best-known of these works is Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith, in which the historic Abraham Lincoln has a fictional secret identity as a hunter of evil vampires.
As well as being a sub-genre of science fiction, these kinds of books can be considered a sub-genre of Invasion literature, which also includes fictional depictions of humans invaded by other humans ( for example, a fictional invasion of England by a hostile France strongly influenced Wells ' depiction of a Martian invasion ).

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