He elicited and compared details and wrote up his findings almost immediately in a highly readable, anecdotal narrative style. |
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Grand amours and boon companionship are conspicuously absent from his narrative. |
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In fact, the narrative is full of loose ends and red herrings, and the episodic writing frequently loses momentum. |
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It was the beginning of a firm friendship, and we collaborated in a book that reprinted the narrative that Orr had written to go with his images. |
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The weird narrative developments are beginning to feel less like clues and more like red herrings. |
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This is partially redeemed by seeing battle-hardened characters acquire new powers, and by the suitably far-fetched narrative sequences. |
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Within America itself, strong female characters emerge from and repudiate the caricatures of womanhood that populate the narrative. |
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Third, I would argue once more that redaction and narrative criticisms are the friend rather than the foe of historical verification. |
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Born to Buy would have benefited from more narrative, anecdotal sugar in the form of compelling characters to make the medicine go down. |
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A work that had been subjected to any kind of redaction would surely show more signs of narrative coherence. |
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His narrative technique links texts that are otherwise quite different in subject matter, thereby creating a sense of amplification. |
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What's more, the narrative has pace and is injected with witty dialogue and humour. |
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I have tried to introduce personal anecdotal narrative into the book because I became very involved in my investigation into the naturopath. |
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Already the jaundice of cynicism and the jaded bitterness of innocence lost cast their hue over my narrative. |
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The issue of representativeness was of little significance because of my predominantly qualitative and narrative research approach. |
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His aim, he explains in a program interview, is to reconnect music to emotions through narrative. |
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The entire composition is unified by an extensive, wintry landscape containing distant narrative details. |
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The two tropes are geology and archaeology integrated into an anecdotal, memorialising narrative form that demands admiration for its adroitness. |
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The narrative halts for a paragraph to depict the dreary marsh landscape on a late winter afternoon. |
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Click here to view a movie and narrative by Don Pettit describing some of the airglow he has seen. |
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The narrative text is quite brief but is well-written and liberally marked up with bold text to identify keywords and key concepts. |
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Notice that his reassurances about her doubts initially take the form of a warning about the dangers of narrative. |
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On the other hand, the temperance narrative confines perception, and thus representation, within the limits of its own ideology. |
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The narrative is tangential and anecdotal, a linear mosaic of small failures and smaller successes, interspersed with laugh out loud one-liners. |
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This substantial collection of 105 pages of poems is not related as a narrative, but as a variety of incidents from different lives. |
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Abuela Celia presents herself in the form of a narrative, represented as she is in the stories she tells about her life. |
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In Eliot's appropriation of the legend, however, the narrative of masculine attainment is rescripted as an initiation ritual. |
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This visual narrative appears to have incorporated other animal stories as well as interjected some coded political statements. |
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Colonial apologists have often used this ahistorical narrative to celebrate the advent of colonialism. |
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Each makes the mistake of missing the narrative forest for the scrupulous reportorial trees. |
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He will pause in the development of his present narrative to elucidate this abecedarian technology. |
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In their political and personalised affirmation of Aboriginality, they challenge and detach themselves from the European historical narrative. |
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Places carry meanings and are coded with narrative significances, and these built-in values are useful to writers. |
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The story is built up through successive emotional crescendos, immediately downplayed by abrupt narrative shifts. |
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The story is a poignant narrative of the troubled times we live in when communal riots tear the couple apart. |
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It's really fascinating, and I feel it's what turns a blog from a series of chats into an absorbing internal narrative, or conversation. |
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It lacks narrative forms, is not reducible to conventional proverbs, and is driven by grievance against God and the world. |
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Scott's long narrative poem Marmion was published in late February 1808 as a luxurious quarto, costing a guinea and a half. |
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If so, isn't it possible that art is in decline not as part of some grand narrative, but as a accidental and possibly fleeting phenomenon? |
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With its detailed narrative, lavish photography and all-star cast, this was more of a short film than an ad. |
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Instead he animates his film with a hybrid of jazzily scored talking-head interviews and beautifully stylized narrative set pieces. |
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Although Merlis' prose remains as fluid as quicksilver, the narrative thrust progressively dwindles as Joel's quixotic journey nears its end. |
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Crowd scenes were always important in early cinema and Capra is an acknowledged master of this form of narrative technique. |
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She has woven a complex narrative of hope and danger in the city that was destined to be the beacon of the New South. |
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To reflect this, God's name seems to have been intentionally left out of the narrative, appearing only as a hidden acrostic. |
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Gehazi is a Yahwist, however, who understands nothing of the transformative faith to which the narrative attests. |
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He is an engaging raconteur, and the narrative offers a wealth of information on both past and present conditions in this part of the world. |
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The Surrealists loved bad movies, seeing them as subversive attacks on the tyranny of narrative form. |
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Charlie's Angels is a film that never takes the requisite conventions and demands of traditional narrative film-making too much to heart. |
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However the first movie was adolescent nonsense, lacking in both characterisation and narrative. |
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Condensing lengthy, rambling stories written in different styles into a coherent narrative is a difficult task. |
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The narrative perhaps shares with a good many other such accounts the adventitious quality of a just so story. |
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His narrative is one of unmitigated Spanish rapaciousness and violence and Indian innocence and moral purity. |
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The consensus was that folk literature is traditional narrative transmitted over time in an original, stable form. |
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Indeed, sometimes the real essence of truth is only to be discovered in the narrative form. |
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The narrative, livened by a selection of Argentinian political cartoons, demonstrates the power of applied economics. |
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The narrative does not slacken with the news of Daniel's death and the widow's hopeless grief. |
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The book includes an introduction, seven narrative chapters, four thematic chapters, a short afterword, and two appendices. |
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The perception of irony reveals the gap between narrative memory and linear reading. |
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It's not happening for real so it simply becomes a question of whether or not you believe it has narrative utility. |
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This was the theory of alienation whereby the audience, already familiar with the story line, does not get caught up with the narrative. |
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The narrative material is obviously shaped in order to wring the audience's melodramatic heart. |
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In works such as Sabbatical and On With the Story, reflexiveness is absorbed into the work's narrative flow. |
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The use of the French reflexive in the present indicative stresses the innate auto-referentiality of Bugul's narrative. |
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He warns against reductionist analyses and emphasises that films should be judged by narrative criteria, as entertainment, and as stories. |
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The author is clever and capable in his redirection of the narrative to focus on the couple rather than on their daughter. |
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Their sense of play and reliance on narrative and metaphor made them vehicles for more than simple reportage and documentation. |
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It is this kind of abortion narrative that is easiest for people to digest, and there are many cases like this. |
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Indeed, the narrative structure of the first half is, as Jameson has suggested, of a writerly nature and schizophrenic in its narrative loops and turns. |
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They got that, but they got it colored by a distancing, third-person narrative and bouts of self-justification. |
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These, he argued, had to be given in the form of narrative without book, which is more accordant with the oriental mode, and decidedly more impressive. |
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Like Moby-Dick, River Bend Chronicle mixes together narrative and essays, not always in chronological order. |
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Thirlwell uses a probing and unique narrative voice which, although jarring at times in its smug omniscience, takes us to the very centre of his characters' anxieties. |
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The authors of this narrative grapple with their white identity as they negotiate new identities that incorporate, sometimes in a romantic fashion, Africanist discourses. |
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The community's crisis of violence is reflected in a recursive narrative pattern, shaped out of repetitions and returns of the repressed memories of white violence in slavery. |
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Over the decades, film and television has told a consistent narrative about Earp. |
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Kurant has crafted a new, cryptic narrative in which the three redundant characters come together in a wrecking yard. |
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Justice should not be selective to fit a political narrative when the facts and evidence prove otherwise. |
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In this selective narrative, the only path to truth is doctrinaire conservatism. |
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The narrative engages the theme of searching for lost roots, in this case, Afro-Caribbean ones, but does so subtly, without fanfare, yet with plenty of visual impact. |
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But in any narrative, if the protagonist is going to be at the center of a sea of abject joy and triumph, someone has to lose. |
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The religious narrative resolved our death anxiety through faith in an afterlife. |
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Irritatingly, the author offers no notes and only in his acknowledgements does he point out which survivors he interviewed and what books he drew his narrative from. |
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Freeman has imagined an elaborate narrative set in a fantastic world, but he creates it from the easily overlooked sections of our quotidian existence. |
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For his part, Bratton is disappointed but not surprised that the same narrative is already being mapped onto Fry and Spencer. |
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Thus the narrative in both stories is roughly circular, replaying events, lurching into indecision, in an effort to get the true story woven into a whole. |
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Individual tales of loss can generate mass action only if they are able to coalesce into a collective narrative. |
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They will find ways to punish you covertly and reward those that do go along with their narrative. |
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From this offbeat narrative experiment, Greendale weaves a story of good, simple townsfolk under assault from authoritarian governments, corporations, media and so on. |
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Attestations of his uncanny powers as well as arguments that question them are found in a report of a narrative related by a man named Bartley Coen. |
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But the show has won its adherents for more than just the neck-snapping plot twists that liberally pepper the narrative. |
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And today, when you look at social media, you see that the narrative can be overtaken by people just from Twitter and Instagram. |
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Their real complaint is that, for the most part, the revisionist narrative has failed to become the dominant narrative. |
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If we look at the relation between narrative and linguistics in terms of langue and language, we will see how Metz overlooks the principle of the image. |
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His oversimplification of the conflict demands that he delegitimize the views of those who dissent from his simplistic narrative. |
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The narrative is a remarkable piece of historical research that spans just over 800 pages. |
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She is able to create coattails for down-ballot races and to change the narrative frame of politics. |
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Ironically, both the opponents and proponents of LGBT equality are repeating the colonialist narrative. |
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This book examines apposition as well as poetic compounds, amphibolies, and certain other narrative devices as keys to style and structure of Beowulf. |
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Simply select a season from your formative years and recast that glorious summer as a coming-of-age narrative. |
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A climatic narrative that encompasses the backstabbing politics of Washington, D.C., with the thrill of international espionage. |
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Bahrain, a staunch American ally and home to the U.S. Fifth Fleet, has lent a unique story in the Arab Spring narrative. |
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Certainly it's not the lame, dated jokes, the lazy writing, the slack narrative pacing, the boring matiness of the male ensemble or the overall emptiness of the film. |
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A welter of poems, plays, epics and narrative poetry came into existence all at once, altering the landscape of literary activity in Bengal forever. |
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For bichir, the film was not only a story about immigration, but rather a narrative of the love of a father for his son. |
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She acts as a sort of lie detector, but proceeds through elegant narrative rather than binary test. |
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The space, the volume of the prose-poem means, for him, more narrative, reportorial opportunity-more time, more stretch, more loop, more transition, more cover. |
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Why they do it who knows, but the Tragic Jen narrative has never run out of steam, even with the presence of the. |
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This dispassionate examination of youthful passion is encased in a rather airless narrative structure. |
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The survivors needed hope for a brighter future, and Murakami sought to supply a salving narrative through his art. |
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In opening with an anonymous voice, only later identified, we are immediately plunged into the allusive narrative style which characterises this novel. |
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At several points during his narrative, he has to stop to regain his composure. |
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This is the keynote, leading to a prolonged examination of how writers have used narrative technique in order to provide aspects of what we guess about consciousness. |
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This standard narrative has served Ilya Kabakov, the godfather of Russian conceptual art, particularly well. |
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Indicating a constant testing of the consciousness of survival, this reiterative process of deferral is what paradoxically shapes and undermines the narrative. |
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He started out with very strong ideas about how he wanted the narrative to run and then prepared his actors, encouraging ad-libs and improvisation throughout. |
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Without commanding, distinguishing words from their mouths, the narrative can be wholly invented for Kate and Letizia. |
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Inherent Vice brings you a sprawling, unobstructed narrative, and then asks you to savor as much as you can. |
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He is known to be difficult, because of his love of the Latinate, and his non-linear, digressive, even symphonic, narrative style. |
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Yet the difficulty was in capturing the immediacy of a narrative that was chaotically in motion. |
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It reflects my personal belief in the objectivity of the United Nations narrative, and is only intended for setting the stage for analyzing Arafat's role in the events. |
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The result in all three cases is a chasm between image and performance that magnifies the narrative of dashed expectations. |
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Hence, it becomes a laundry list of programs, not a coherent narrative. |
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The narrative that emerges is one in which the math team member tries, without success, to ask the cheerleader out. |
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The former sees the text as a window into the development of the tradition, and the latter sees the text as a mirror reflecting its own narrative world. |
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Richly documented, absorbingly developed, and beautifully written, this is narrative of the highest order, likely to become a classic of its kind. |
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Neither has Lane done himself any favours by dispensing with a chronological narrative in favour of themed chapters with abstract titles such as Complicity and Betrayal. |
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For narrative complexity, Hideo Kojima's Metal Gear Solid series and Amy Hennig's Legacy of Kain games offer stories rich with nuance and complicated moral quandaries. |
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For one, these maps often use narrative to chart the landscape, rather than constraining it to a grid with coordinates. |
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Its kaleidoscopic narrative line, in turn, comes from motorcyle culture. |
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Porzecanski employs two recurrent phallic and yonic symbols in the narrative. |
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At this point in his narrative Snorri ties up his tale of Harald's aftername. |
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It is a narrative that has cast the American datenkraken as the arch enemy. |
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A second oppositional narrative to the dominant interpretation might be added, that of the declensionists. |
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I must fain resign all poetic disportings of the fancy, and pursue my narrative in humble prose. |
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In ancient narrative literature, ethopoeia is a frequently used literary tool. |
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A few weeks before Wesley had asked me to gamemaster a role-playing narrative, I had purchased the Forgotten Realms Campaign Set. |
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Many later entries, especially those written by contemporaries, contained a great deal of historical narrative under the year headings. |
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Styles differ, especially between the west and east, with more human figures and some narrative elements in the latter. |
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Artistic subjects with a narrative component are only found in the east, in both pottery and metalwork. |
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When he returned to the narrative later in life, Claudius skipped over the wars of the second triumvirate altogether. |
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Tacitus wrote a narrative for his fellow senators and fitted each of the emperors into a simple mold of his choosing. |
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Eusebius is vague about when and where these events took place, but it enters his narrative before the war against Maxentius begins. |
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The history of this period has traditionally been a narrative of decline and fall. |
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He had coins struck there that called him king, but there is no narrative record of his occupation. |
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He reshaped each plot to create several centres of interest and to show as many sides of a narrative to the audience as possible. |
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James Britton says that we rationalize and logicalize our memories into narrative form. |
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There are also chronological problems with Bede's narrative, as surviving papal letters contradict Bede's account. |
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He was typically shown in narrative scenes, with a preference for New Testament miracles, and few of scenes from his Passion. |
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With more space, narrative images containing many people develop in churches, and also begin to be seen in later catacomb paintings. |
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Traditionally, popular history is almost purely driven by narrative. |
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In the narrative of Saxo, Uffi is said to have been dumb or silent during his early years. |
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At this point Geoffrey abruptly pauses his narrative by inserting a series of prophecies attributed to Merlin. |
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The dramatic narrative of the close of Wolsey's life becomes manyfold more impressive from being told to the discrowned Queen Catherine. |
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There is an additional major initial of the Christmas narrative of Matthew. |
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The Vercelli Book and Exeter Book contain four long narrative poems of saints' lives, or hagiography. |
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We will examine these works briefly, grouping them into narrative, didactic, hagiographic, lyric, satiric and dramatic literature. |
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The novel provides a more inclusive historical narrative to challenge the one which usually relates only masculine events. |
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Although they all displayed a talent for narrative, it was the younger ones whose pastime it became to develop them. |
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Controversial from the start of its release, its originality, its subject, narrative style and troubled action raised intrigue. |
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That, and an increasing recognition of his extraordinary narrative gifts, make him a force to be reckoned with. |
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Other narrative poems have since been published posthumously, including Launcelot, The Nameless Isle, and The Queen of Drum. |
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It is a narrative poem composed in alliterative verse and is modelled after the Old Norse poetry of the Elder Edda. |
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They are usually narrative in structure and make considerable use of repetition. |
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It will be suggested here that the myth of Perseus, involving the decapitation of Medusa, is a narrative version of ritual. |
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Casino Royale reboots the series, establishing a new timeline and narrative framework not meant to precede or succeed any previous Bond film. |
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The official reason for the cutting was that Otto's dialogue slowed down the narrative. |
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In The Prestige, the series of magic tricks and themes of duality and deception mirror the structural narrative of the film. |
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The book, written in Latin, is a frame narrative primarily depicting a fictional island society and its religious, social and political customs. |
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The question is, then, what is the relationship of biblical narrative to its literary milieu? |
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The first notable, and historically important, book credited to a Bermudian was The History of Mary Prince, a slave narrative by Mary Prince. |
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Another narrative focuses on high levels of private debt in the US economy. |
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A novel is any relatively long, work of narrative fiction, normally in prose, and typically published as a book. |
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A novel is a long, fictional narrative which describes intimate human experiences. |
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The novel is today the longest genre of narrative prose fiction, followed by the novella. |
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In it the author not only addresses the reader in his preface but speaks directly to him or her in his fictional narrative. |
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Livy made reference to and uses Polybius' Histories as source material in his own narrative. |
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The poem is similar in ethos to heroic poetry, with the emphasis on the heroes fighting primarily for glory, but is not a narrative. |
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Ishiguro's technique is to allow these characters to reveal their flaws implicitly during the narrative. |
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Other forms of traditional narrative verse relate the outcomes of battles or describe tragedies or natural disasters. |
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On looking at the final composition, he realised it created a narrative, as if the viewer moved through the room. |
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With the decline of the Roman Empire, the narrative shifts to Medieval art, which lasted for a millennium. |
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Wollstonecraft's Letters Written in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark is a deeply personal travel narrative. |
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The epic poetic history of The Brus and Wallace helped outline a narrative of united struggle against the English enemy. |
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A tendency away from the narrative, which was characteristic for the traditional arts, toward abstraction is characteristic of much modern art. |
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The mood is epic, but there is no single narrative, although the same characters reappear. |
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Dundes defined myth as a sacred narrative that explains how the world and humanity evolved into their present form. |
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The Medieval Welsh tale Culhwch and Olwen has many triads embedded in its narrative. |
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Some of the magical objects listed can be shown to have earlier origins in Welsh narrative tradition. |
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For narrative types by definition have consistent structure, and follow an existing model in their narrative form. |
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Each actor's portrayal differs, but all represent stages in the life of the same character and form a single narrative. |
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Since the 2005 revival, the Doctor generally travels with a primary female companion, who occupies a larger narrative role. |
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There is usually a choreographer who makes the creative decisions and decides whether the piece is an abstract or a narrative one. |
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Ushant is mentioned in Dmitry Lukhmanov's narrative 20 000 miles under sail. |
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From the narrative of Ammianus Marcellinus it is evident that both Frankish and Alamannic tribal armies were organised along Roman lines. |
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The American poet Tim Miller has also written a small narrative poem on the journey of Pytheas. |
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His works, according to the Suda, were collected in 26 books but each of these was probably a long, narrative poem. |
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Lyrical poets often took their subjects from myth, but their treatment became gradually less narrative and more allusive. |
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Unlike their portrayals in Greek religion, Homer's portrayal of gods suited his narrative purpose. |
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He remains for several days, takes part in a pentathlon, and hears the blind singer Demodocus perform two narrative poems. |
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Odysseus' narrative, Book 9, featuring his encounter with the cyclops Polyphemus, is traditionally called the Cyclopeia. |
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Aside from the narrative of the historical events, Polybius also included three books of digressions. |
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According to Lawrence Stone, narrative has traditionally been the main rhetorical device used by historians. |
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He was not writing an annalistic history, nor was he even trying to create a narrative. |
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In all this, Cadamosto's narrative evinces a degree of honest curiosity and absence of prejudice perhaps surprising for a European of that era. |
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Maya art has many regional styles, and is unique in the ancient Americas in bearing narrative text. |
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The original narrative can be found in the rambling chronicle El Carnero of Juan Rodriguez Freyle. |
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In any case, the Pricket narrative became the controlling story of the expedition's disastrous end. |
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In form and spirit the book is unique, a simple romantic narrative transmuted by sheer glow of beauty into a prose poem. |
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Tracking Quicumque vult poses some difficulties, given the date of the Elyseus narrative. |
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Hobsbawm was a brilliant historian in the great English tradition of narrative history. |
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At the end of Victor's narrative, Captain Walton resumes the telling of the story, closing the frame around Victor's recounting. |
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It is a truly gripping story, told in a lean, hard, athletic narrative prose that puts more literary English to shame. |
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The Annales were not written in a continuous narrative, but in the style of earlier annals, giving the events of each year in a separate entry. |
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Ghosts often appear in the narrative as sentinels or prophets of things to come. |
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The unfolding narrative often exposes a disciple's uneven progress, striving to sift out authentic guides from their counterfeits. |
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Similarly, Ripley, as the thwarter of the wishes of the godlike Company, proclaims herself as the adversary of this narrative. |
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The other narrative is of mobility in the service of ambition. |
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His texts reveal an effort to unwrite narrative and, in effect, unwrite Beckett. |
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These titles adumbrate Wright's conclusions about the function of the rituals in different parts of the narrative. |
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This, however, was a later result, and comes not within the scope of the present veridicous narrative. |
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He is writing a detailed narrative of his life on the island. |
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Neither his fake narrative nor Eileen's perverse echoes of it are memories, stories, affording the reciprocity of an auratic relation. |
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Early works like Medea and Zentropa laid the cinematography on thick and backpedaled narrative into a rumpled sketch. |
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As might be expected, this comes at the expense of narrative. |
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Early in the narrative, Shelley flags Frankenstein's aberrance by his preoccupation with the ancient authors of natural philosophy. |
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The female actant has served her purpose and is relegated to the background of the narrative. |
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Like his formalist colleagues, Malas sublimated and sieved his regime critique through highly aestheticized approach to narrative. |
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Wincher, Kate Summerscale successfully spins historical fact into a sensationally entertaining narrative. |
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El Shaddai is certainly an artistic tour de force, but its muddled narrative and wonky action are very much an acquired taste. |
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By contrast, the second, or Yahvist, narrative of creation makes the female subservient to the male. |
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By omitting blocks of narrative time and inserting anachronous scenes, Carter also marks lost time for the region. |
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By ignoring it, however, he cedes the narrative to the Republicans. |
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She has kept Tolstoy's essays, which interrupt the narrative in Books III and IV but has undone the Aylmers' Anglicisation of Russian names. |
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Likewise, the discourses of the Buddha found in the Jatakas use the fable as a social, philosophical and moral narrative. |
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Appropriately enough, the missing narrative is titled Gentleman's Relish, a euphe-mism for the aftermath of jouissance. |
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The false claim is one of at least a dozen coloring the narrative. |
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The result, in apperceiving the thirty-two scenes as a unified whole, is new narrative the plot of which becomes clear. |
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The mujahedin narrative was much more honest than that of the communists. |
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The accumulating appositives recall the long unlikely narrative of even having this son. |
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His stories were constructed with ruthless narrative efficiency. |
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It takes narrative magic to pull off such a loopy combination, and luckily, Reif Larsen has it to spare. |
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Gopnik creates a first-person narrative describing the world according to an autist. |
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His boss explains his land-poor plight in a chapter-long narrative that is illustrative of the dialogue throughout the book. |
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In any case, the narrative resonance of all this is impossible to deny. |
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On one end of the masculine identity spectrum, there is the retrosexual masculine narrative. |
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But it lacks the narrative pace and visual immediacy of people in a tent ballsing up cakes. |
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Lettish saclt means 'to say' and saka is an expression for the narrative form saga. |
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Allen's narrative is well documented, written rivetingly for general readers. |
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Set in the year 2083, this is a cyberpunk-themed action RPG, where four unique characters progress independently through the same narrative. |
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Although Freud combs through various historical sources on Amarna, his certainty in the validity of his narrative mirrors that of biblical authority. |
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Intimately woven together, the combination of pictorial and narrative elements effectively turns Richard into a storyteller, who acts out the plot he has constructed. |
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Some narrative theorists try to meet the issue of unlanguaged experience by extending the very concept of narrative to include forms of narrative outside languaged narrative. |
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When Bede wrote his Ecclesiastical History of the English People, he adapted Gildas' narrative and added details, such as the names of those involved. |
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From consciousness-raising to coming out stories to twelve-step programs, the personal narrative has always held a place of honor in our community. |
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The narrative developed here is that Jesus survived the cross to father children with Mary Magdalene whose descendants founded the Merovingian dynasty. |
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His long poems have a certain narrative and psychological penetration, and some of his lyrics have a strength of melody to match their depth of thought. |
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Furthermore, future renditions and adaptations of the story include an evil laboratory assistant Igor or Ygor, who does not actually exist within the original narrative. |
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The recounted story serves as the frame for Frankenstein's narrative. |
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The narrative also cameos the actual Newburyport in the first chapter. |
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Finally, Figure 5 below elicits, in the manner of an exploded axonometric, the different narrative layers by exposing them as individual entities. |
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Northeastern does not have any system of grade point averages or class rank, Instead, the school uses a system of narrative evaluations to measure student performance. |
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Halsbury's Laws of England is a uniquely comprehensive encyclopaedia of law, and provides the only complete narrative statement of law in England and Wales. |
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Neologisms may come from a word used in the narrative of a book. |
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Allegedly in the latter class was ship's navigator Abacuk Pricket, a survivor who kept a journal that was to become a key source for the narrative of the mutiny. |
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The exact literary category or classification that Duan's large informal narrative would fit into is still debated amongst scholars and historians. |
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In most of his writings he keeps to a chronological narrative order, only seldom outlining the bigger picture, leaving the reader to construct that picture for himself. |
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Bede quoted his sources at length in his narrative, as Eusebius had done. |
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But these, and the particulars of his narrative for which no literary sources have yet been found, are too few to constitute a proof of personal experience. |
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The adoption of a dynastic name legitimized Mongol rule by integrating the government into the narrative of traditional Chinese political succession. |
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A national myth is a legend or fictionalized narrative which has been elevated to a serious mythological, symbolic, and esteemed level so as to be true to the nation. |
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In chapter 8 of Fagrskinna, a prose narrative states that, after the death of her husband Eric Bloodaxe, Gunnhild Mother of Kings had a poem composed about him. |
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Some writers in the period did construct a more narrative form of history. |
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This article argues that English studies about the Holodomor should focus on the historical conditions that led to it, through study and interpretation of narrative texts. |
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It is not altogether uncommon to hear a reader whose heart has been desolated by the poignancy of a narrative complain that the writer is unemotional. |
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For the purposes of this article, history is taken to mean written history recorded in a narrative format for the purpose of informing future generations about events. |
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His first historical narrative known as the History of Switzerland, which represented Gibbon's love for Switzerland, was never published nor finished. |
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However, much of his account has not yet been corroborated by archaeology, whilst his narrative must in wide parts be considered as biased and, in some points, unlikely. |
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The narrative ability of Orosius should also not be overlooked. |
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Linguistic anthropologists often draw on related fields including sociolinguistics, pragmatics, cognitive linguistics, semiotics, discourse analysis, and narrative analysis. |
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The Nordic version presents a complete, direct narrative of the events in Thomas' Tristan, with the telling omission of his numerous interpretive diversions. |
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Divine narrative played a more important role in the system of Greek religious belief than among the Romans, for whom ritual and cult were primary. |
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Historians reject his interpretations, with some accusing him of creating a sectarian narrative in which Ulster Protestants have a prior to claim to Ireland. |
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The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter is considered the oldest Japanese narrative. |
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Modern archaeology has largely discarded the historicity of this narrative, with it being reframed as constituting the Israelites' inspiring national myth narrative. |
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The last record in the Annales Bertiniani dates to 882, and so the only contemporary narrative source for the next eighteen years in West Francia is the Annales Vedastini. |
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This is in contrast to a narrative or history, which sets selected events in a meaningful interpretive context and excludes those the author does not see as important. |
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The first part consists of Gildas' explanation for his work and a brief narrative of Roman Britain from its conquest under the Principate to Gildas' time. |
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During her brief career, she wrote novels, treatises, a travel narrative, a history of the French Revolution, a conduct book, and a children's book. |
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I have tried to degenderize the narrative and dispose of unneeded words. |
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Eventually the people began using the broadsheet as a source for political activism by reprinting speeches, ballads or narrative songs originally performed by bards. |
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By The Who Sell Out, he began to work narrative and characters into songs, which he fully developed by Tommy, including spiritual themes influenced by Baba. |
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In this painting he uses the lovers for his narrative and makes his symbolic points with the convolvulus, signifying entanglements, climbing up the steps. |
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Y Gododdin is not a narrative poem but a series of elegies for heroes who died in a battle whose history would have been familiar to the original listeners. |
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Romance or chivalric romance is a type of prose and verse narrative that was popular in the aristocratic circles of High Medieval and Early Modern Europe. |
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Romance or chivalric romance is a type of narrative in prose or verse popular in the aristocratic circles of High Medieval and Early Modern Europe. |
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According to Geoffrey's narrative, Cordelia had buried her father beneath the river in a chamber dedicated to Janus and that his feast day was an annual celebration. |
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Eight dance forms, many with narrative forms and mythological elements, have been accorded classical dance status by India's National Academy of Music, Dance, and Drama. |
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Its narrative course and structure, characters and imagery have been enormously influential in both popular culture and literature, especially in the fantasy genre. |
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A ballad is a form of verse, often a narrative story and set to music. |
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