There are two reasons for that, not that anyone need explain an eschewal of monomania. |
Richter's compulsive eschewal of cliché — little concerned with results, which stutter on uncrossed verges of meaning — suggests desiccated existentialist anguish: Giacometti without tears. |
McCarthy's typical eschewal of character development accentuates the intensity, but his crisp clean prose is stimulating, his concepts original and his visual imagery powerful. |
Her work combines seriousness and simplicity of form in a determined eschewal of grandiosity. |
Belsey's way is finally not the way of the New Historicists with their thick descriptions of culture, their anthropological bent, and their eschewal of psychoanalysis. |
The British tradition stands out, however, for its eschewal of arms. |