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is and surrealistic
During Hackworth's decade-long exile with the Drummers, he is able to maintain a connection with his daughter through the Primer, and when he returns she joins him, eventually choosing to stay with a surrealistic acting troupe in London.
Aleixandre's early poetry, which he wrote mostly in free verse, is highly surrealistic.
An example is Han Han's ( 韩寒 ) novel 他的国 His land ( 2009 ), which was written in a social critical surrealistic style against the uncritical mainstream, but ranked 1st in 2009 Chinese bestseller list.
Its surrealistic humor is often based on uncomfortable social situations, improbable events, an anthropomorphic view of the world, logical fallacies, impending bizarre disasters, or the search for meaning in life.
The remaining portion of LeChuck's Revenge is surrealistic: One chases the other in a vague abandoned underground place that includes elevators, machines, an office etc.
Their brand of surrealistic humor is best known through their record albums, which acquired an enthusiastic following in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
He is mostly known for colorful surrealistic paintings.
He is best known for his Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey, a large body of surrealistic one-liner jokes, as well as his " Fuzzy Memories " and " My Big Thick Novel " shorts.
These compositions contain nothing overtly surrealistic, yet the clarity of moonlit detail is hallucinatory in effect.
In 1968 Jefferson Airplane referenced the book in their song The House at Pooneil Corners, a surrealistic depiction of global nuclear war co-written by Paul Kantner and Marty Balin, ending with the line " Which is why a Pooh is poohing in the sun ".
Buffy scholar Nikki Stafford calls the surrealistic episode " unprecedented in television ", saying it is " so jam-packed with information that we'll probably be seeing allusions to it for the rest of the series ", and referring to it as a " mysterious lead-in to the emotionally turbulent season five ".
Sitcom is a 1998 French surrealistic satire film written and directed by François Ozon.
" In a sense, his best known works – the " multiforms " and his other signature paintings – are, in essence, the same expression, albeit one of purer ( or less concrete or definable, depending on your interpretation ) means, which is that of the same " basic human emotions ," as his earlier surrealistic mythological paintings.
Though Rimbaud predated surrealism, he is said to have written in a surrealistic style due to the hallucinatory, dreamlike aspect of many of the poems.
*" My idea of a perfect surrealist painting is one in which every detail is perfectly realistic, yet filled with a surrealistic, dreamlike mood.
# REDIRECT Surrealism surrealistic is an art movment that happened in the 1800 thanks
The first style is dominated by representation, with the best-known examples coming from his fantastic realism period when he painted disturbing images of a surrealistic, nightmarish environment.
This is his best-known period, during which he created very disturbing images, showing a surrealistic, post-apocalyptic environment with very detailed scenes of death, decay, landscapes filled with skeletons, deformed figures and deserts.
With Japanese cultural and surrealistic themes, it is an example of Yoshimoto's clean writing style that portrays the emotions of grief, loss, and hope.
" Boucher and McComas praised the novel as " a taut, surrealistic melodrama a masterful compounding of science and detective fiction ," singling out Bester's depiction of a " ruthless and money-mad that is dominated and being subtly reshaped by telepaths " as particularly accomplished.
Idiotland is a surrealistic comic book by Doug Allen and Gary Leib published by Fantagraphics in 1993 – 1994.
This is similar to the way social realists wish to present their messages, although Tucker ’ s actual delivery was surrealistic and expressionistic in appearance.

is and stream-of-consciousness
Evidence is plentiful that early and later also he has been indebted to the Gothic romancers, who deal in extravagant horror, to the symbolists writing at the end of the preceding century, and in particular to the stream-of-consciousness novelists, Henry James and James Joyce among them.
The anarchic comedy film, as its name suggests, is a random or stream-of-consciousness type of humour which often lampoons a form of authority.
The question of who was the first to write stream-of-consciousness drama for radio is a difficult one to answer.
Astral Weeks is often referred to as a song cycle or concept album with lyrics described as impressionistic, hypnotic, and stream-of-consciousness.
* Bret Easton Ellis sent up the sentence in his 1991 novel American Psycho, as narrator Patrick Bateman utters, " a Rolls is a Rolls is a Rolls " during one of his frequent materialist stream-of-consciousness tirades.
The first section of the book is essentially a collection of short stream-of-consciousness essays, which Kerouac called " sketches ", many simply describing elements of Duluoz's ( Kerouac's ) post-World War II New York City environment, from the texture and smells of a lunch counter to St. Patrick's Cathedral, or minor events like the decision to masturbate in a public restroom — all interlaced with Kerouac's internal dialogue.
Free association also shares some features with the idea of stream of consciousness, employed by writers such as Virginia Woolf and Marcel Proust :'all stream-of-consciousness fiction is greatly dependent on the principles of free association '.
Dalby received praise from Booklist for the manner in which she uses stream-of-consciousness to create a work in which the eastern concept of time is contrasted with the western ; her ability to see with an anthropologist's eye and yet to bring an imaginative and creative view to this work ; and in particular to bring together the various places she has lived, from Kyoto, where she was the first western woman to become a geisha in the 1970s, to northern California where she currently lives.
As in the poet's earlier works, the book is one long stream-of-consciousness in the style of a French symbolist poem — with plenty of white spaces between the individual verses which wash through the poet's mind with stark imagery and contemplative clarity.
A Scots Quair, with its combination of stream-of-consciousness and lyrical use of dialect, is considered to be among the defining works of 20th century Scottish Renaissance.
Hopscotch is an introspective stream-of-consciousness novel where characters fluctuate and play with the subjective mind of the reader, and it has multiple endings.
" Don't Interrupt The Sorrow " is an acoustic guitar-based song with stream-of-consciousness lyrics, focused on women standing up to male dominance and proclaiming their own existence as individuals.
La Woman is an innovative and catchy mix of eclectic samples and stream-of-consciousness lyrics.
It is often loosely semi-autobiographical, free-flowing in an ersatz stream-of-consciousness mode, and heavily informed by left-wing critical theory, but arises ultimately from linguistic ideas around performative utterances.
Cox is known for literate stream-of-consciousness, caustic wit, left-leaning political commentary, and controversial comedy routines.
In particular Q5, which first aired on 24 March 1969, and with its surreal bent and almost stream-of-consciousness format is seen by many as a forerunner to Monty Python's Flying Circus, which debuted some months later.
Duchamp's art does not lend itself to simple interpretations, and The Large Glass is no exception ; the notes and diagrams he produced in association with the project – ostensibly as a sort of guidebook – complicate the piece by, for example, describing elements that were not included in the final version as though they nevertheless exist, and " explaining " the whole assembly in stream-of-consciousness prose thick with word play and jokes.
Ellison has given few clues as to the artistic or socio-political goals of this piece of grand guignol, which is perhaps not surprising, given that his writing style has often been depicted as stream-of-consciousness in nature, at least once a story finally comes to fruition or maturity in his mind.

is and polemic
It is both an extended discussion ( and polemic ) on Stoic physics, and an exposition of Aristotelian thought on this theme.
This essay is a polemic against corruption and Gildas provides little in the way of names and dates.
While these characteristics fit a Monophysite framework, a slight majority of scholars consider that Ignatius was waging a polemic on two distinct fronts, one Jewish, the other docetic, while a distinct minority holds that he is concerned with a group that commingled Judaism and docetism.
It contains an extended polemic against the doctrine of predestination ( Chapter 164 ), and in favour of justification by faith ; arguing that the eternal destination of the soul to Heaven or Hell is neither pre-determined by God's grace ( as in Calvinism ), nor the judgement of God, in his mercy, on the faith of believers on Earth ( as in Islam ).
These books carry a sharp polemic, hardly surprising when it is recalled that his opponents charged Wycliffe with blasphemy and scandal, pride and heresy.
" Whether or not this amounts to misogyny, whether his polemic against women is meant to be taken literally, and the exact nature of his opinions of women, are controversial.
A four gospel canon ( the Tetramorph ) was asserted by Irenaeus, who refers to it directly in his polemic Against the Heresies, " It is not possible that the gospels can be either more or fewer in number than they are.
Most nursery rhymes were not written down until the 18th century, when the publishing of children's books began to move from polemic and education towards entertainment, but there is evidence for many rhymes existing before this, including " To market, to market " and " Cock a doodle doo ", which date from at least the late 16th century.
Since this story was intended as a political polemic, credit for the first science fiction story is often given to later Bengali authors such as Jagadananda Roy, Hemlal Dutta and the polymath Jagadish Chandra Bose ( see Bengali science fiction ).
Ferdinand Christian Baur ( 1792 – 1860 ), founder of the Tübingen School, drew attention to the anti-Pauline characteristic in the Pseudo-Clementines, and pointed out that in the disputations between Simon and Peter, some of the claims Simon is represented as making ( e. g. that of having seen the Lord, though not in his lifetime, yet subsequently in vision ) were really the claims of Paul ; and urged that Peter's refutation of Simon was in some places intended as a polemic against Paul.
Fundamentalism is a movement, rather than a denomination or a systematic theology, which gained ascendance after the release of a ten-volume set of essays, apologetic and polemic, written by many well-known conservative Protestant theologians to defend what they saw as Protestant orthodoxy — covering a wide range of topics, from defenses of the Divinity of Jesus Christ, his Virgin Birth, of the historicity of Biblical narratives, Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch, and of Biblical inerrancy against the prevalent higher-critical theories of the day, to the falsity of theological systems such as Christian Science, " Millennial Dawnism ", Mormonism, to the errors of " Romanism "— over the course of 1910-1915, called The Fundamentals: A Testimony to the Truth, from which the movement receives its eponymous name.
Following the DIY punk ethic, Crass combined the use of song, film, sound collage, and graphics to launch a critical polemic against mainstream culture which is built on foundations of war, religion, and consumerism.
While his writing is often hyper-real and its polemic qualities can often be startling, his main strength lies in his ability to discredit almost everything and yet not lose a sense of enraged humanity.
In the Christian polemic of the Church Fathers, Cardea is associated with two otherwise unknown deities who preside over doorways: Forculus, from fores, " door ", plural in form because double doors were common on public buildings and elite homes ( domūs ); and Limentinus, from limen, liminis, " threshold " ( compare English " liminal ").
A more unexpected rejection in 1999 came from artists — some of whom had previously worked with found objects — who founded the Stuckists group and issued a manifesto denouncing such work in favour of a return to painting with the statement " Ready-made art is a polemic of materialism ".
At an early stage of his polemic with Culianu, Mircea Eliade complained in writing that " it is not possible to write an objective history " of the Iron Guard and its leader Corneliu Zelea Codreanu.
Besides his translations of Aristotle's Metaphysics and Xenophon's Memorabilia, his most important work is a treatise directed against George of Trebizond, a vehement Aristotelian who had written a polemic against Plato, which was entitled In Calumniatorem Platonis (" Against the Slanderer of Plato ").
It is conspicuously free from Oriental mysticism, and it contains no polemic against Christianity, to the doctrines of which, in fact, there is no allusion.
His polemic, which is inspired throughout by Locke, is directed against the innate ideas of the Cartesians, Malebranche's faculty-psychology, Leibniz's monadism and preestablished harmony, and, above all, against the conception of substance set forth in the first part of the Ethics of Spinoza.
Nordau's major work Entartung ( Degeneration ), is a moralistic attack on so-called degenerate art, as well as a polemic against the effects of a range of the rising social phenomena of the period, such as rapid urbanization and its perceived effects on the human body.
He does not, indeed, maintain thereby that the execution of this command is equivalent to the performance of the whole Law ; and in one of his polemic interpretations of Scripture he protests strongly against a contrary opinion allegedly held by Christians, according to which Judaism is " simply morality " ( Mek., Shirah, 3, 44a, ed.
Lovecraft scholar Peter Cannon dismissively describes the story as " little more than a polemic against the intrusion of people Lovecraft regarded as ' foreigners ,' that is, the non-English immigrants who arrived in the nineteenth century as cheap labor to fill the factories of an increasingly industrialized America.

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