Sentences with phrase «new kind of death»

Not exact matches

It is clear that a new kind of helmet will not be a panacea for cycling accidents and deaths: only last November, six cyclists in London were killed in just 13 days.
The book moves back and forth between accounts of meetings and chronological detail to a kind of theological interpretation grounded in the Christian language of death and new life.
Best known for The Star of Redemption, published eight years before his death in 1929 at the age of forty - three, he began a new kind of dialogue between Judaism and Christianity when he argued that....
I consider this an ambiguous gift: on the one hand, postmodern tendencies open up spaces for the new perspectives and voices mentioned above; on the other hand, as the social critic Jane Flax notes, a hard - core kind of postmodernity which would postulate the death of history, of the human being and of metaphysics undermines the kind of critical reason that is necessary to counter the «master narrative» constituted by capitalist globalization.
Vocabularies are exhausted and languages altered in the attempt to praise him enough; death is looked on as gain if it attract his grateful notice; and the personal attitude of being his devotee becomes what one might almost call a new and exalted kind of professional specialty within the tribe.
The resurrection makes Jesus» death a failed sacrifice, but of a new kind.
Food trees are a way of providing a person or family with food when they could most use some help, like when a new baby enters the family or someone has surgery, a death or any other kind of need.
With that background, it's easy to understand why some men might be hesitant to tie the knot in the kind of one - size - fits - all traditional marriage model we've been practicing, which is yet another reason why the marital models in The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels will help brides - and grroms - to - be — and, in this case, especially the grooms — get the marriage they want without vague vows of «until death do us part.»
World events and disasters of all kinds can make it harder to deal with other difficult or traumatic personal situations such as illness or death in the family, divorce, a move to a new town or school.
Assemblyman Joseph Lentol, a Brooklyn Democrat who heads the chamber's codes committee and is an outspoken supporter of criminal justice reform, told POLITICO New York that while Holder's death was tragic, it was a poor starting point for the kind of changes the mayor is advocating.
Time is of the essence, because the beating - heart cadaver — a brand new kind of creature, known only since the advent of brain death — could easily have a heart attack and die again before his organs are removed.
In the largest study of its kind, using Centers for Disease Control data on nearly 14 million linked infant birth and neonatal death data, term singleton U.S. births, researchers at New York - Presbyterian / Weill Cornell Medical Center found the absolute risk of neonatal mortality was 3.2 / 10,000 births in midwife hospital births, and 12.6 / 10,000 births in midwife home births, and it further increased in first - time mothers to 21.9 / 10,000 births in midwife home deliveries.
Steve: You know, today is also the anniversary of the death of Darwin, speaking of the human evolution with Kate, and just to finish up — am I wrong, but isn't the place you're most likely to find a fistfight at a conference, one of these human evolution anthropology conferences where people are arguing over whether that bone represents a new species or just an example of a known species or whether some artifact is again a new species or some kind of pathological example of an old species?
We see the manipulation and brutality and are shocked every time a new development or a new death is televised, so why is it that we don't have that kind of reaction to Claire and Frank Underwood?
Narratives of this kind aren't anything particularly new for Hollywood after the original Death Wish set the template, and Roth's version lacks something of note to make it stand from the crowd.
That's kind of what director Christopher Smith is offering with his new film Black Death.
How is it that Tom Welling, the WB's new «Smallville» heartthrob, finds himself in the David from «Eight is Enough» role (another family drama coloured by the death of a parent), while the rest of the non-descript kinder fill the stock roles of pre-lesbian, frog - loving freak, princess, twins, and rabble?
Philippe Petit's 1974 high - wire walk between New York's Twin Towers was several things: illegal, death - defying, comically absurd and, as evoked in the majestic 2008 documentary «Man on Wire», suffused with a kind of coolheaded urban poetry.
DVD Details: Miramax has released a new 2005 Collector's Series DVD, but I'm not sure how well the film will play 16 years later, since this kind of disease - of - the - week biopic — and variations thereof — has been copied to death (Shine, A Beautiful Mind, etc.).
But on the other hand, we're at a point in film history where there's only one star who's good at this kind of musical leading man role who has enough box office credibility from other projects (specifically his nearly 20 - year run as Wolverine) to get an automatic green light for almost any new musical movie just by saying «Yes,» and that's Jackman — so I'd rather not nitpick him to death here.
The persistence of grief and the hope of redemption are themes as timeless as dramaturgy itself, but rarely do they summon forth the kind of extraordinary swirl of love, anger, tenderness and brittle humor that is «Manchester by the Sea,» Kenneth Lonergan's beautifully textured, richly enveloping drama about how a death in the family forces a small - town New Englander to confront a past tragedy anew.
In a new post on his Instagram, Dolan says he will not submit his next feature, «The Death and Life of John F. Donovan,» to the festival, partly because it simply won't be done in time, and partly because of the kind of «trolling, bullying and unwarranted hatred» he sees as part of the current critical climate.
Black Panther hits all the stereotypical superhero beats — avenging of familial death, mystical substances, a critical artifact of some kind, big dumb fights — while every other element feels brand - new, such as: Multiple people of colour!
Those who are eager to slam Paramount's new «Baywatch» movie are probably the same kind of haters who let the original SoCal - set television soap opera die an abysmal - ratings death upon its initial release in the fall of 1989, when NBC hastily canceled...
I live in North Carolina and my sister lives in California and I wanted to spend as much time with her as I could; I also wanted to bond with my new child and the push and pull, the wonder of life and tragedy of death, made concentration of any kind difficult.
I did not know then what kind of living thing I would become, but the guard didn't let me have a chance to think about it — he grasped my arm and dragged me till Pearl assured him that she'd support me, and she put her arm around my waist as we were led away with the triplets, away from the ramp and into the dust, onto a little road that led past the sauna and toward the crematoria, and as we marched into this new distance with death rising up on either side of us, we saw bodies on a cart, saw them heaped and blackened, and one of the bodies — it was reaching out its hand, it was grasping for something to hold, as if there were some invisible tether in the air that only the neardead could see.
In scenes alive with emotional truth, River, Cross My Heart weighs the effect of Clara's absence on the people she has left behind: her parents, Alice and Willie Bynum, torn between the old world of their rural North Carolina home and the new world of the city, to which they have moved in search of a better life for themselves and their children; the friends and relatives of the Bynum family in the Georgetown neighborhood they now call home; and, most especially, Clara's sister, twelve - year - old Johnnie Mae, who must come to terms with the powerful and confused emotions sparked by her sister's death as she struggles to decide and discover the kind of woman she will become.
OK, that's enough from me for now — hopefully this adds some interesting (& speculative) insights, both near term and / or long term, to my investment thesis: We're in a bull market, which just might transform itself into a bubble, and even ultimately become the mother of all bubbles... This is obviously an evolving thesis — which I must highlight, is designed to be constantly questioned and re-evaluated based on new data & developments, and certainly not a thesis to be simply adopted & defended to the death with all kinds of confirmation bias.
The new objective - oriented War mode includes all kinds of various activities such as moving a tank, building a bridge, and capturing point after point, so traditional gunning for a big kill - death - assist ratio is a thing of the past.
Hilton Als, a theater critic at The New Yorker, who curated the Alice Neel exhibition in Chelsea, writes, «In the years since her death, viewers young and old have experienced the kind of thrill I feel, still, whenever I look at Neel's work, which, like all great art, reveals itself all at once while remaining mysterious.»
Chapter 1: Things Must be Pulverized: Abstract Expressionism Charts the move from figurative to abstract painting as the dominant style of painting (1940s & 50s) Key artists discussed: Willem de Kooning, Barnett Newman Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko Chapter 2: Wounded Painting: Informel in Europe and Beyond Meanwhile in Europe: abstract painters immediate responses to the horrors of World War II (1940s & 50s) Key artists discussed: Jean Dubuffet, Lucio Fontana, Viennese Aktionism, Wols Chapter 3: Post-War Figurative Painting Surveys those artists who defiantly continued to make figurative work as Abstraction was rising to dominance - including Social Realists (1940s & 50s) Key artists discussed: Francis Bacon, Lucien Freud, Alice Neel, Pablo Picasso Chapter 4: Against Gesture - Geometric Abstraction The development of a rational, universal language of art - the opposite of the highly emotional Informel or Abstract Expressionism (1950s and early 1960s) Key artists discussed: Lygia Clark, Ellsworth Kelly, Bridget Riley, Yves Klein Chapter 5: Post-Painting Part 1: After Pollock In the aftermath of Pollock's death: the early days of Pop, Minimalism and Conceptual painting in the USA (1950s and early 1960s) Key artists discussed: Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, Cy Twombly Chapter 5: Anti Tradition - Pop Painitng How painting survives against growth of mass visual culture: photography and television - if you can't beat them, join them (1960s and 70s) Key artists discussed: Alex Katz, Roy Lichtenstein, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol Chapter 6: A transcendental high art: Neo Expressionism and its Discontents The continuation of figuration and expressionism in the 1970s and 80s, including many artists who have only been appreciated in later years (1970s & 80s) Key artists discussed: Georg Baselitz, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Anselm Kiefer, Julian Schnabel, Chapter 7: Post-Painting Part II: After Pop A new era in which figurative and abstract exist side by side rather than polar opposites plus painting expands beyond the canvas (late 1980s to 2000s) Key artists discussed: Tomma Abts, Mark Grotjahn, Chris Ofili, Christopher Wool Chapter 8: New Figures, Pop Romantics Post-cold war, artists use paint to create a new kind of «pop art» - primarily figurative - tackling cultural, social and political issues (1990s to now) Key artists discussed: John Currin, Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas, Neo Rauch, Luc Tuymnew era in which figurative and abstract exist side by side rather than polar opposites plus painting expands beyond the canvas (late 1980s to 2000s) Key artists discussed: Tomma Abts, Mark Grotjahn, Chris Ofili, Christopher Wool Chapter 8: New Figures, Pop Romantics Post-cold war, artists use paint to create a new kind of «pop art» - primarily figurative - tackling cultural, social and political issues (1990s to now) Key artists discussed: John Currin, Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas, Neo Rauch, Luc TuymNew Figures, Pop Romantics Post-cold war, artists use paint to create a new kind of «pop art» - primarily figurative - tackling cultural, social and political issues (1990s to now) Key artists discussed: John Currin, Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas, Neo Rauch, Luc Tuymnew kind of «pop art» - primarily figurative - tackling cultural, social and political issues (1990s to now) Key artists discussed: John Currin, Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas, Neo Rauch, Luc Tuymans
But in the early 1950s, in the years just before his tragic death at age 44 in an alcohol - fueled car crash, Pollock was experimenting with a new way of confronting his surface, spilling black enamel paint — the kind you might use on outdoor ironwork — onto raw cotton duck canvas, a clashing, angry union of synthetic industrial chemical and unprimed organic substrate.
In the years before her death in 2004, she mined the language of good old American T.V. for a new kind of image, critiquing the structures and corporations that regulate mass media even as she employed their own strategies against them.
Lucy Dodd, «2 Doors, 1 Tomb, Coming through the backside of death - left», 2013, Leaf Extract, Yerba Maté, Liquid Smoke, Wild Walnut Kind, Hematite Iron Glimmer, Black Lichen, Bubs Urine, Charcoal, Kombucha SCOBY, Fosphorescents, Yew Berries, Spirulina, Salvia, Nettle, Red Annato, Mixed Pigments, and Flower Essence on Canvas, 115 x 92 inches, 292.1 x 233.7 cm, LD001, Installation view, «Cake 4 Catfish», David Lewis, New York, 2013
«Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus, recently declared «the death of environmentalism,» generating quite a buzz... Whether or not environmentalism is dead, dying, or in some kind of undead zombie state, new voices within the environmental and conservation movements are arguing for a wholly new kind of movement that entails recovering values of another, more conservative America.
It is kind of sad that these new temperature records of 129F at Death Valley are overshadowed by untrustworthy figures from 100 years ago.
We represent clients in all kinds of New Mexico personal injury and wrongful death cases, including accidents with semi-trucks.
Accidental Death Insurance is usually met with all kinds of feelings, however, Fabric Life Insurance has taken a new look at this product and re-imagined it.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z