shrieks Paul Giamatti's squirrelly record executive, sounding very much like a character in a movie insisting on
the historical importance of its subjects, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.
Not exact matches
We consider
of fundamental
importance to forge that awareness
of the context in which we interrelate to educate future workers who have this sociability with its causes and consequences and develop their work from a holistic perspective, avoiding partial technicality that ignores that the human being is a
historical subject, isolating individuals at the current time ignoring the past.
This is a video
of a number
of authors on the
subject of sex in books: Erica Jong on writing about sex as a way
of finding answers, Lawrence Block on the definition
of erotica, Patricia Gaffney on
historical romances, Suzanne Forster on the
importance of sexual tension, and Eileen... more >
Survey Art and technology scholar Edward A. Shanken gives a lucid, engaging evaluation
of the
subject, contextualizing it in a broader art -
historical and political framework and outlining the
importance of figures previously neglected by art history.