Sentences with phrase «literature of a given age»

The literature of a given age reflects it perfectly.

Not exact matches

The literature of Spain's «Golden Age» produced two figures — Don Quixote de La Mancha and Don Juan Tenorio — who quickly escaped the confines of the works that gave them birth and took up exalted but previously unoccupied stations in the Western imagination.
The Nobel Committee that gave him the 1957 Prize for Literature already felt him to be a significant moral and spiritual presence at forty - three (only Kipling won at a younger age): «Even in his first writings Camus reveals a spiritual attitude that was born of the sharp contradictions within him between the awareness of earthly life and the gripping consciousness of the reality of death.»
3) The infusion time of MTX was reduced from 24 h to 3 h as a higher drug penetration has been achieved by a shorter infusion time.9 4) Importantly, given the cited literature, the treatment was age - adjusted with patients aged over 65 years having cyclophosphamide of the second and fifth and ifosfamide of the fourth chemotherapy cycle replaced by the less toxic agent temozolomide (TZM).
Other strategies include: (1) establishing and using a time - out or cooling - off place (even an informal time - out activity like having a child take a message, book, or box of chalk to another teacher could give the student the space and time he or she needs to maintain or regain composure); (2) applying role plays, simulations (for example, Barnga, Living in a Global Age, Rafa - Rafa, and Broken Squares) and moral dilemmas to teach students how to resolve conflicts, make collective decisions, appreciate different perspectives, weigh consequences, identify right from wrong, and check impulsive behavior; and (3) suggesting or assigning literature with characters who face similar challenges to that of the disabled student.
If I could, I would now proceed to quote the whole poem before going further — it is so glorious, the foundation masterpiece of Western literature — in this immaculately forged new translation by Robert Fagles, which gives us much of Homer's precision, resurrecting the terrible beauty of Greece's Bronze Age in language as swift as Apollo's arrows — note the overwhelming inevitability of the half line «and down he came like night» — yet enclosing a gorgeous strength capable of burnishing each detail to brilliance.
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