I'd suggest Alice in
Imaginary Land as a suitable title, with characters that...
Not exact matches
Nowadays, though no one doubts that the dramatic detail of the Flight of Helen, the Wrath of Achilles, and the rest, is
imaginary, the poems are treated
as valuable sources of evidence for the history of Greece and neighbouring
lands shortly before 1000 BC Even our own Arthurian legends, I observe, are now treated seriously by quite serious historians, when they are seeking for light upon the dark age of Britain.
If of course you measure success
as an
imaginary castle in a far away
land that you can only reach by dying and no one has ever been able to confirm its existence... then I think christians give the rest of the world a run for its money.
«In Under the Table, 1994, the viewer is in the
land of
imaginary giants
as well
as in the remembered world of one's own childhood.
French painter Sylvain Lefebvre sees himself
as an explorer of his own personal universe, an «
imaginary wanderer in search of new
lands».
In his catalogue essay, Gioni describes the exhibition
as «a
land of wilderness and ruins that exists in an
imaginary time zone suspended between a remote past and a not - so - distant future.»
Joe, you mention that «Lewandowsky falsely linked climate skeptics to moon
landing hoaxism, and free marketeers to rejection of beliefs they overwhelmingly endorsed» Far worse, his compatriot Prof David Karoly falsely linked skeptics to an (
imaginary) «relentless campaign» of electronic death threats against Australian climate scientists, none of which Karoly deigned or was asked to produce
as evidence despite the fact that he was alleging the existence of a serious (and despicable) criminal conspiracy.
(
As ever, Canada is an
imaginary land in this display and wind stops at borders.)