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Harold and Bloom
* The Western Canon ( book ), book on the Western canon by Harold Bloom
Although love is central to both Christianity and Judaism, literary critic Harold Bloom ( in his Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine ) argues that their notions of love are fundamentally different.
* Bloom, Harold ( 2005 ).
* Bloom, Harold ( Ed.
* Moynihan, Robert ( 1986 ) Recent Imagining: Interviews with Harold Bloom, Geoffrey Hartman, Paul DeMan, J. Hillis Miller.
* Bloom, Harold, editor.
* Bloom, Harold.
* 1930 – Harold Bloom, American writer and critic
Harold Bloom suggests that this passage reveals the narrator's desire to rival Khan's ability to create with his own.
Harold Bloom suggests that the power of the poetic imagination, stronger than nature or art, fills the narrator and grants him the ability to share this vision with others through his poetry.
Harold Bloom, in 2010, argued that Coleridge wrote two kinds of poems and that " The daemonic group, necessarily more famous, is the triad of The Ancient Mariner, Christabel, and ' Kubla Khan.
* Bloom, Harold.
Harold Bloom.
* Bloom, Harold.
Harold Bloom.
Harold Bloom.
Harold Bloom.
It was well received, and, despite having almost none of the play's script, critic Harold Bloom called it " the most successful film version of Macbeth.
In an opinion shared in some form or another by Harold Bloom, and Peter Alexander, early scholar Andrew Cairncross, stated that " It may be assumed, until a new case can be shown to the contrary, that Shakespeare's Hamlet and no other is the play mentioned by Nashe in 1589 and Henslowe in 1594.
Some in the literary community expressed disapproval of the award: Richard Snyder, the former CEO of Simon & Schuster, described King's work as " non-literature ", and critic Harold Bloom denounced the choice:
In an interview published in the Paris Review, literary critic Harold Bloom called the movement " the death of art ".
The use of semiotic methods to reveal different levels of meaning and, sometimes, hidden motivations has led some like Yale's Harold Bloom to demonise elements of the subject as Marxist, nihilist, etc.
* Bloom, Harold, ed., " Ursula K. Leguin: Modern Critical Views " ( Chelsea House Publications, 2000 )
Yale University Professor of Humanities Harold Bloom ( no relation to Allan ) has also argued strongly in favor of the canon, and in general the canon remains as a represented idea in many institutions, though its implications continue to be debated.
* Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human by Harold Bloom ( ISBN 978-1573227513 )

Harold and called
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term ' frequentist ' was first used by M. G. Kendall in 1949, to contrast with Bayesians, whom he called " non-frequentists " ( he cites Harold Jeffreys ).
The site used to offer free downloads of a program called AARON — a visual art synthesizer developed by Harold Cohen — and of " Kurzweil's Cybernetic Poet ", which automatically creates poetry.
King Harold had a son posthumously, called Harold Haroldsson, who may have been this man, and may also be the occupant of the grave.
Sweyn and Harold called up their own vassals, but neither side wanted a fight, and Godwin and Sweyn appear to have each given a son as hostage, who were sent to Normandy.
The two main protagonists are Harold Godwinson, recently crowned King of England, leading the Anglo-Saxon English, and William, Duke of Normandy leading a mainly Norman army, sometimes called the companions of William the Conqueror.
Throughout, William is described as " dux " ( duke ) whereas Harold, also called dux up to his coronation, is subsequently called " rex " ( king ).
In October 1964, Conservative Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home ( who had only been in power for 12 months since the resignation of Harold Macmillan ) called a general election.
In 1984 the Riverside Shakespeare Company of New York City produced a modern dress Julius Caesar set in contemporary Washington, called simply CAESAR !, starring Harold Scott as Brutus, Herman Petras as Caesar, Marya Lowry as Portia, Robert Walsh as Antony, and Michael Cook as Cassius, directed by W. Stuart McDowell at The Shakespeare Center.
In May 1951, Gollancz invited Harold Wilson to chair an AWP committee and write a pamphlet which was eventually called ' War on Want-a Plan for World Development ', published on 9 June 1952.
The play opened to good reviews and Harold Hobson called the second play in the double-bill, " one of Rattigan's masterpieces, in which he shows in superlative degree his pathos, his humour and his astounding mastery over the English language ...".
He raided the coast as far as Sandwich but was forced to retreat when King Harold called out land and naval forces.
Harold V. McIntosh also describes " nonplanar " ( i. e., they can't be flexed so they lie flat ) flexagons ; ones folded from pentagons called pentaflexagons, and from heptagons called heptaflexagons.
Harold Begbie, a journalist of the period, wrote a book called Mirrors of Downing Street, in which he criticised Balfour for his manner, personality and self-obsession.
* < sup > 1 </ sup > Holt changed her name to Patti La Belle in 1963 after Harold Robinson was sued by a manager of a group, also called the Blue Belles, therefore becoming Patti La Belle and Her Blue Belles.
Harold Ford of Tennessee described the results an " absolute blowout " and called upon Gephardt to step down, saying that it was time for " new ideas and new faces ".
In a special Imagist issue of The Egoist magazine in May 1915, the poet and critic Harold Monro called H. D.
Dumbo is based upon a children's story written by Helen Aberson and illustrated by Harold Pearl that was prepared to demonstrate the prototype of a toy storytelling display device called Roll-A-Book, which was similar in principle to a panorama.
In 1962, Howard E. Scott and Harold Brown formed a group called The Creators in Long Beach, California.
Their work appeared in a series of five anthologies called Georgian Poetry which were published by Harold Monro and edited by Edward Marsh.

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