Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Mircea Eliade" ¶ 177
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

George and Călinescu
Eliade's views at the time focused on innovation — in the summer of 1933, he replied to an anti-modernist critique written by George Călinescu:
George Călinescu who saw in it " an echo of Nae Ionescu's lectures ", traced a parallel with the essays of another of Ionescu's disciples, Emil Cioran, while noting that Cioran's were " of a more exulted tone and written in the aphoristic form of Kierkegaard ".
This differentiation, George Călinescu believed, echoed Ionescu's metaphor of man, seen as " the only animal who can fail at living ", and the duck, who " shall remain a duck no matter what it does ".
Investigating the works ' main characteristics, George Călinescu stressed that Eliade owed much of his style to the direct influence of French author André Gide, concluding that, alongside Camil Petrescu and a few others, Eliade was among Gide's leading disciples in Romanian literature.
George Călinescu objected to its " monotony ", and, noting that it featured a set of " intelligent observations ", criticized the " banality of its ideological conversations.
The solution, George Călinescu noted, mirrored the strange murder in Gide's Lafcadio's Adventures.
George Călinescu criticized the book for inconsistencies and " excesses in Dostoyevskianism ", but noted that the Lecca family portrayal was " suggestive ", and that the dramatic scenes were written with " a remarkable poetic calm.
Eliade's short story Şarpele (" The Snake ") was described by George Călinescu as " hermetic ".
Early on, George Călinescu argued that the totalitarian model outlined in Huliganii was: " An allusion to certain bygone political movements [...], sublimated in the ever so abstruse philosophy of death as a path to knowledge.
* George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române de la origini până în prezent (" The History of Romanian Literature from Its Origins to Present Times "), Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1986
Also, George Călinescu was a more complex writer who, among different literary creations, produced the monumental " History of the Romanian literature, from its origins till present day ".
George Călinescu is another complex personality of the Romanian literature: novelist, playwright, poet, literary critic and historian, essayist, journalist.
* George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române de la origini până în prezent (" The History of Romanian Literature from its origins till present day "), 1941
According to literary historian George Călinescu, Iorga's " huge " and " monstrously " comprehensive research, leaving no other historian " the joy of adding something ", was matched by the everyday persona, a " hero of the ages ".
According to George Călinescu, Nicolae Iorga was overdependent on his memory, which could result in " utterly fictitious " critical apparatuses for his scientific works.
A decade later, George Călinescu described in detail the historian's public speaking routine: the " zmeu "- like introductory outbursts, the episodes of " idle grace ", the apparent worries, the occasional anger and the intimate, calm, addresses to his bewildered audience.
George Călinescu referred to this series as Iorga's " interesting " and " eminently subjective " literature ; " dignified " and dominated by " explosions of sentiment ", it echoes, according to Călinescu, the Renaissance model of Ion Neculce.
* George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române de la origini pînă în prezent, Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1986
A generation younger than Ibrăileanu, George Călinescu also noted the contrast between Mihail Kogălniceanu and his predecessors, as two sets of " Messianist " intellectuals — in this contrast, Heliade Rădulescu was " hazy and egotistic ", whereas Kogălniceanu and others had " a mission which they knew how to translate into positive terms ".
* George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române.
In his main work on the history of Romanian literature, George Călinescu included Caragiale among a group of " Balkan " writers, whose middle class status and often foreign origin, he argued, set them apart irrespective of their period — others in this category were, in chronological order, Anton Pann, Tudor Arghezi, Ion Minulescu, Urmuz, Mateiu Caragiale, and Ion Barbu.
Uniquely among students of Caragiale's work, George Călinescu argued that the writer's main interest was not in criticizing the liberals, but actually in an overall rejection of the most embedded Junimist tenets, which, in Călinescu's view, had engendered " a lack of faith in the country's own powers ".
In parallel, literary critic George Călinescu argued that " he typological structure is present in Caragiale's work as a supporting structure, without being essential.

George and objected
It met with stronger resistance in the Senate — some Senators objected to the change of name ; Ernest Manning, who argued that the rationale for the change was based on a misperception of the name, and George McIlraith, who did not agree with the manner in which the bill had been passed and urged the government to proceed in a more " dignified way "— but finally passed.
In addition, the Club for Growth also makes independent expenditures to pressure certain moderate Republicans to vote more conservatively ( e. g. running ads against Senators George Voinovich of Ohio, Olympia Snowe of Maine, and Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island after these Senators objected to certain aspects of President Bush's tax cuts ).
However the British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the American President Wilson objected to the detachment of the Rhineland from Germany, but agreed to Allied military occupation for fifteen years, which Foch thought insufficient to protect France.
His religious views led to conflict within the school: he objected to the teachings of English minister George Whitefield, an itinerant minister of the Great Awakening, and other itinerant teachers such as Gilbert Tennent.
She was one of the 31 in the House who objected to the official allotment of the electoral votes from Ohio in the United States presidential election, 2004 to incumbent George W. Bush.
Controversy emerged during the 1880s ; Kent and Nottinghamshire objected to the bowling actions of John Crossland and George Nash.
Good Night, and Good Luck ( 2005 ), the movie portraying this era directed by George Clooney, left Stanton out of the film as a character, partly because Stanton was still living and might have objected to his portrayal.
He also denied that George Speight had opposed the decision, saying that if he had objected to the dissolution of the party, he would have informed his brother and CAMV Cabinet Minister Samisoni Tikoinasau, who visited him regularly in prison.
When the local diocese read the original script by George Tabori, it objected to the priest's execution and rescinded its permission.
The character was named Escol Sellers in the first edition and changed to Beriah when an actual George Escol Sellers of Philadelphia objected.
The Democratic Unionist Party objected to the offer and drew attention to his comments from an interview in 1999 with an American political magazine, George.
The book also claims that in college Laura Bush was " a go-to girl for dime bags of marijuana ", Barbara Bush objected to the fact that her son's girlfriend's stepfather was Jewish, and that at Harvard, George W. Bush objected to a classroom viewing of the film The Grapes of Wrath by asking " Why are you going to show us that Commie movie?
In 1820, George IV wished to appoint him canon of Windsor, but the prime minister, Lord Liverpool, objected ; Sumner received instead a royal chaplaincy and librarianship, and other preferments quickly followed, till in 1826 he was consecrated bishop of Llandaff and in 1827 bishop of Winchester.
Multiple senators objected to naming a territory after a single man, acknowledging Washington Territory ( named in 1853 for George Washington ) as the sole exception.
A number of leading New South Wales players, including Jack Blackham, Harry Boyle, George Bonnor, and Percy McDonnell objected to the payment arrangements for the tour, and boycotted the first and second Tests in protest at what they perceived at unfair treatment.

George and narrative
The narrative ends with the death of Lucy abroad, Clara and Robert happily married and living in a country cottage with George and his son.
* Margaret George wrote an epic adult novel, Helen of Troy, in 2006, told through Helen's first-person narrative.
Heavily influenced by George Grosz, Félix Vallotton, Fernand Léger, Eric Gill and, most of all, the narrative woodcuts of Frans Masereel, Harper's style evolved in the 1980s in a bolder, expressionist direction, with much of his later work resembling woodcut, although he mainly works in pen and ink, and watercolour.
The Orlando narrative inspired several composers, amongst whom were Claudio Monteverdi, Jean-Baptiste Lully, Antonio Vivaldi and George Frideric Handel, who composed an Italian-language opera with Orlando.
In this story of New Zealand and Te Kooti's War during the year beginning November 10, 1868, the narrative coalesces around the development of its protagonist, George Fairweather, who in Shadbolt ’ s historical epilogue is described as “ A composite character ... yet still far from fictional .” Fairweather is a competent but cynical former British officer in his early forties, who leaves the service under a cloud, turns landscape painter and cultivates an air of worldly detachment.
Trevelyan was the third son of Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, and great-nephew of Thomas Babington Macaulay, whose staunch liberal Whig principles he espoused in accessible works of literate narrative avoiding a consciously dispassionate analysis, that became old-fashioned during his long and productive career.
According to the Golden Legend, the narrative episode of Saint George and the Dragon took place in a place he called " Silene ", in Libya ; the Golden Legend is the first to place this legend in Libya as a sufficiently exotic locale, where a dragon might be imagined.
George Kilpatrick and separately Michael Patella state that a comparison of the Nativity stories of Luke and Matthew show common elements in terms of the virgin births, the birth at Bethlehem and the upbringing at Nazareth and that although there are differences in the accounts of the Nativity in Luke and Matthew, a general narrative may be constructed by combining the two.
In an interview with Fellini's screenwriter Ennio Flaiano, he said the name came from the Italian translation based on a 1901 southern Italy travel narrative by Victorian writer George Gissing, By the Ionian Sea.
British National Archives In this narrative a flexible cable brake for cycles was separately ' invented ' by George Frederick Larkin, a skilled automobile and motorcycle engineer, who patented his design in 1902.
The main character in Coetzee's 2007 Diary of a Bad Year, which has been described as blending " memoir with fiction, academic criticism with novelistic narration " and refusing " to recognize the border that has traditionally separated political theory from fictional narrative ", shares similar concerns about the policies of John Howard and George W. Bush.
" Professor George Davidson, of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, after a careful study of the narrative and the coast identifies the harbour entered by Drake with Drake's Bay, under Point Reyes, about thirty miles ( 50 km ) north of San Francisco.
Unlike the slightly old-fashioned use of a continuous narrative sequence found in the St. Ursula series, wherein the main characters appear multiple times within each canvas, each work in the Schiavoni series concentrates on a single episode in the lives of the Dalmatian's three patron Saints: St. Jerome, St. George and St. Trifon.
Although fictional in its narrative, the story includes appearances by Tariq Aziz and George H. W. Bush.
* ' Playing with Strife ', The Autobiography of a Soldier, Lt-Gen. Sir Philip Neame, V. C., K. B. E., C. B., D. S. O., George G Harrap & Co. Ltd, 1947, 353 pages, ( written whilst a POW, the best narrative of Vincigliata as Campo PG12, contains a scale plan of Castello di Vincigliata, and photographs taken by the author just after the war )
The narrative was sent to King George III and other leading politicians.
The story of George Polgreen Bridgetower reimagined in the poetry of Pulitzer Prize-winner and former U. S. poet laureate Rita Dove, who was inspired to write her lyrical narrative by Bridgetower's short but intense relationship to Beethoven, especially Bridgetower's premiere performance of Violin Sonata No. 9.
The main character is a Communist, George Heisler ; the narrative follows his path across the countryside, taking refuge with those few who are willing to risk a visit from the Gestapo, while the rest of the escapees are gradually overtaken by their hunters.
Disraeli had outlined the principles of Young England in The Vindication of the English Constitution ( 1835 ), which characteristically opens with an attack on utilitarian beliefs, but Lord John Manners and George Smythe more widely disseminated its neo-feudal ideals in verse and narrative forms.
Twenty years in the writing, the book showed Faber's admiration for Dickens's prose and George Eliot's narrative architecture, but its themes were informed by feminism, post-Freudian awareness of sexual pathology, and post-Marxian class analysis, as well as by unrestricted access to Victorian pornographic texts that had been suppressed until the late 20th century.
Founded principally by George Lindbeck, Hans Wilhelm Frei and other scholars at Yale Divinity School it is sometime referred to as " the Yale school " or " narrative theology ".
The cast also featured British comedian Frankie Howerd as Mean Mr. Mustard ( his only major U. S. film appearance ; he later quipped about the film " It was like Saturday Night Fever, but without the fever "), Paul Nicholas as Dougie Shears, George Burns as Mr. Kite, Donald Pleasence as B. D., referred to in Burns ' narrative voice-over as B. D.
George Orwell stayed at Hairmyres Hospital, during which time the main narrative for his last novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four, was composed.
In his narrative Carton also confesses to being the real father of Harry Flashman the roguish hero of the series of books created by George MacDonald Fraser who in turn borrowed him from Tom Brown's Schooldays by Thomas Hughes.

0.966 seconds.