Sentences with phrase «of poetic terms»

Not exact matches

He wants to argue that mercy is not just important in the Bible's story of our salvation, where God is sometimes described anthropomorphically or in poetic language, but that in precise theological terms mercy is the highest perfection of God.
Brown appeals particularly to the word play of Isaiah 5:7: the monumental clarity and poetic elegance of the juxtaposition of the term z» daqah, «the cry,» with its remedy, ze «aqah, «justice.»
It's only after we're older once we've had notions pounded into our heads that we can't or shouldn't learn from this or that, that we lose our ability to appreciate all of God's creations and see God's hand (poetic term not literal) in all things (or worse, some have been so blinded as to see it in nothing, as they hide behind their cold scientific idols, losing the same wonder that got the scientists there to start with)
This type of psychosis is explained by Buber in poetic terms in I and Thou.
Whatever else that term means, the poetics of postmodernism and the poetics of the Middle Ages have much in common.
To rhapsodize a «poetic» view of the Dolomite mountains, for example, from one's hotel window, or to eulogize a patient's «epic» struggle with cancer, or to call Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata «lyric» is to speak in obviously laudatory terms.
It is at this point that the very poetic and symbolic nature of the term «resurrection» begins to make itself felt even in the context of the ancient myth.
A middle position sees the biblical record as neither completely divine nor completely human, but as Involving both God and man; its authors conveyed profound insights into the nature Of God, but expressed this religious message in poetic form and in terms of the understanding of the world then currenOf God, but expressed this religious message in poetic form and in terms of the understanding of the world then currenof the understanding of the world then currenof the world then current.
We may, of course, use the term «Satan» as a poetic personification of evil, but we still face the question of whether this is what the Bible intends to say.
I am first defining the poetic function in a negative manner, following Roman Jakobson, as the inverse of the referential function understood in a narrow descriptive sense, then in a positive way as what in my volume on metaphor I call the metaphorical reference.7 And in this regard, the most extreme paradox is that when language most enters into fiction — e.g., when a poet forges the plot of a tragedy — it most speaks truth because it redescribes reality so well known that it is taken for granted in terms of the new features of this plot.
Stone's film enacts in all its glory, seductiveness, and rushing confusion the myth that became its ruling good — the idea of spiritual quest occurring through hedonistic frenzy; and it not only shows its bad consequences, but how it was failing even on Morrison's own poetic - mythic terms.
Using examples from mythology, Scripture, theology, and philosophy, Rollins shows how mankind has long been interested in speaking of God in these terms, to the point that «instead of thinking about our understanding of God as a poetic utterance arising from an encounter with God, it was thought that our understanding of God directly matched up with the very nature of God.
The lines of the prayer itself, understood in poetic terms, provide us with the answer: the turn that occurs in the Hail Mary signifies the birth of Christ.
Suggesting that the Incarnation takes place in the pause is in harmony with the logic of the prayer when considered in precise poetic, and more general theological and scriptural, terms.
It is certainly due to Whitehead's defense of «the creative advance of nature,» which seems to be nothing but a poetic term for the uniform time of Newton.
Tom Troeger focuses on the mythic worlds created by metaphor, which he terms «landscapes of the heart,» and demonstrates how communal, poetic idiom can speak to an individualistic, technological culture.
Losing ourselves refers to another element of poetic faith, when the audience is, in the psychologists» term, «transported.»
Kiwi terms of affection may not be as poetic as those above but our survey showed that they're still popular: if you're a honey, a babe, a darling, or a love, there's a region of NZ that speaks your name.
The two amalgamate in an idiosyncratic slice of poetic realism that — while not necessarily saying anything new about cowboy virility — is still hypnotic in terms of sheer craft.
A term module of study material which covers the following: Developing interpretation and presentation skills - Vocal Elements in Drama (Pitch, Pace, Pause, Tone etc) and Non-verbal Elements in Drama (Stance, Posture, Gestures etc.) Interpretation and Presentation of Poetry - Poetic Devices (Alliteration, Assonance etc) Stereotyping and Exploring Discrimination and Prejudice - Stock Characters and Stereotypes, Commedia dell «Arte Aligned to the South African Creative Arts Curriculum for Grade 9 Teterm module of study material which covers the following: Developing interpretation and presentation skills - Vocal Elements in Drama (Pitch, Pace, Pause, Tone etc) and Non-verbal Elements in Drama (Stance, Posture, Gestures etc.) Interpretation and Presentation of Poetry - Poetic Devices (Alliteration, Assonance etc) Stereotyping and Exploring Discrimination and Prejudice - Stock Characters and Stereotypes, Commedia dell «Arte Aligned to the South African Creative Arts Curriculum for Grade 9 TermTerm 2
Crofting is a fine term, and as a Scot of course I connect with it, but I think a more accurate but less poetic term might be «portfolio worker, or perhaps «parallel artisan».
While people who see my work are full of compliments (even using terms such as «poetic»), I need to develop my work as a brand to drive sales so I can make a living aas well as buy new equipment to expand the range oe my work.
The artist selected some of the more exotic and poetic terms, including Fogoió (Fox on Fire Red), Enxofrada (Angry Sulphur), Café com Leite (Milky Coffee), Branquinha (Snow White), Burro - quando - foge (Faded Fawn), Cor Firme (Steady Colour), Morenão (Big Black Dude), Encerada (Buffed) and Queimada de Sol (Sun Kissed).
[39] In spite of the diversity of their plastic language, they perceived a common basis for their work; this being a method of direct appropriation of reality, equivalent, in the terms used by Restany; to a «poetic recycling of urban, industrial and advertising reality».
Poetic in sound and somewhat removed from contemporary lexicon, this term is used to describe a single thing — originally a word — that carries a number of meanings.
Through numerous examples of still life, portraiture, and beyond, we see how Ray constantly experimented with new techniques, pushing photography out of its documentary domain into ethereal, poetic expressions through multiple exposure, solarization, and the particular brand of photograms he wittily termed «rayography.»
The selected works depict the hand literally, in the context of portraiture, for example, as well as figuratively, in terms of the poetic emphasis given to hand gestures in documentary images.
The terms of Judd's approval were far less poetic and humanist in inclination than most of his contemporaries.
His text, which offers a poetic meditation on the nature of human existence and artistic expression, suggests that a person — defined in political and aesthetic terms — is always «less than one.»
Term denoting the intense, poetic, figurative and semi-abstract British landscape paintings of Paul Nash, Graham Sutherland and others in the late 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, that gave a modern interpretation to the romantic, visionary works of the 18th century William Blake and the 19th century Samuel Palmer.
With works dating from 1975 to 1988, the exhibition «Poetic Form» focuses on John Chamberlain's mid-career return to the use of car metal as a sculptural material, as well as his long - term interest in vibrant, colorful expression in 2 and 3 dimensions.
A generation of artists, grouped together under the term «Arte Povera», emerged in Italy in the second half of the 20th century who, influenced by Piero Manzoni and Lucio Fontana's artwork, and turning to the use of simple, everyday materials, realised a series of works that, without relinquishing a kind of poetic awareness of the world, were profoundly critical of industrialisation and consumer society.
Dye often referred to his works as «devices» and this archival exhibition takes up this term, highlighting the ways in which he examined relationships between objects and spectators, manipulating their locations and exploring the poetics of projection and perception.
Exhibited last summer on the heels of Kelley's suicide, the exhibition included works from his long - term Kandor Project, two floors of his videos made solo or with various collaborators (1978 - 1986) and selected soundtracks from «The Poetics» (1977 — 1983), the art punk band featuring Kelley and video artist Tony Oursler.
Cryptic interpretations of history and identity, in terms of both her race and gender lead to an almost poetic understanding of the politics and personal iconographies that underlay both.
With the internet as his podium and round table, he has been historicizing and canonizing these artists, young and old, who have been creating art outside the norms of traditional graffiti, esoteric forms of painting and sculpture that veer outside of the proscribed boundaries into the experimental, the abstract, the poetic, and the hybrid.Artists that fall under the term Progressive Graffiti are generally innately gifted draftsmen, who aspire to a Master's Level at their craft.
It opens with a long montage of interviewees talking up the project in poetic, outsized terms — one says the Voyager probes were «knocking on eternity,» another talks about how «every second, [Voyager 1] goes somewhere else we have never been before.»
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