One reason that avant-garde film wasn't reviewed in newspapers during my time as a critic had to do with the avant-garde film world. |
|
He looked for all the world like an art critic absent-mindedly contemplating a particularly engrossing landscape. |
|
The simple truth is, there is only one man alive who has ever been on-air talent for a successful film critic TV show. |
|
Sergio replied to my friend with such extraordinary receptivity and honesty that the critic was instantly disarmed. |
|
Milton, who worked as a film critic as well as an agency copywriter, was a wordsmith. |
|
In this case, the rich girl would be right to assume that the critic is below the rebuker in life. |
|
The film critic and biographer has been commissioned to tidy up the novel and write an afterword to set the book in context. |
|
Yes, I firmly believe if a literary critic is not interested in erotica he should change jobs. |
|
We get it, you worked as a rock critic and you like really like rock music. |
|
She was arts editor, theatre critic and subsequently literary editor for The Spectator during the Sixties. |
|
This anonymous critic mistakenly used free speech as an excuse for committing a hate crime. |
|
He embarks on a rant about a late Evening Standard critic and fiddles with his lighter to calm down. |
|
A critic or a cinegoer can sit in judgement on a film and say that a subject is shallow. |
|
This explanation provides us examples of Rae's great strength as an expositor and social critic and of his great weakness as a theorist. |
|
According to an autopsy, the activist who had been a staunch critic of human rights violations by the military died of arsenic poisoning. |
|
She was the muse and lover of the French poet and art critic Guillaume Apollinaire. |
|
The Orlando restaurant critic did a year-end round-up of Central Florida restaurants, handing out a variety of awards. |
|
If your critic has only said it to put you down, this makes you bigger than him. |
|
She worked first as a news reporter, then feature writer, film critic and agony aunt. |
|
By most all accounts the evening was a success, with one local critic lauding the orchestra's exciting accelerandos and heart-stopping rubatos. |
|
|
A 1948 review by a famous critic states categorically that a good voice is not essential for delineating ragas in the Carnatic mode. |
|
It was more closely modelled on the imperial system than either critic or supporter ever concedes. |
|
To the detriment of his career, he became a public critic of nuclear weaponry. |
|
He's also a strident critic of the auction system, and dubious about recent reforms. |
|
We cannot control what other's write about us, and today's critic may be tomorrow's biographer and obituarist. |
|
The notices were extraordinary, one critic from the Literary Review describing Wallace as a cross between Franz Kafka and David Lynch. |
|
The querulous critic who scolds it as he would a spoiled child, has not learned the primer of politics. |
|
Boxer is perhaps best known for richly textured abstract canvases, championed by critic Clement Greenberg. |
|
For every fan there has been a critic and no player has polarised public opinion more. |
|
She was a caustic critic of charismatic ministers who speechify but don't mobilize. |
|
I was for many years a supporter of the planning system, then a doubter, now a critic. |
|
He also emerged as a stern critic of Mr McCreevy's Special Savings Investment Scheme pet project. |
|
It was written by a very good critic whom I quite respect, but he was trying to create a scandal to generate publicity. |
|
Nevertheless, the first woman literary critic of Malayalam proved her critics and sceptics wrong. |
|
Perhaps a critic who sat at the drive-in in the '60s could walk down memory lane with you and revel in the supreme badness of these films. |
|
You've been an outspoken critic of genetically modified foods and genetic engineering. |
|
In her book, Cheryl is a vociferous critic of her treatment by journalists, accusing us of relentless intrusion into her privacy. |
|
The criticizers were difficult though, and one critic called him a mole in an elseways lovely movie. |
|
He became a critic of all policies of decolonization of territories which he considered an integral part of France. |
|
The food critic dry-heaved upon hearing that that the fast-food chain plans to open 300 new outlets. |
|
|
Get her out of the restaurant critic gig, and back to the features before all is lost. |
|
Scotland On Sunday art critic Iain Gale was less enthused, likening it to a show room for a factory production line. |
|
Since the Vietnam era, he's been an unrelenting critic of US foreign policy and this book's no different. |
|
He was trying to have it both ways, being an administration player one day and an outside critic the next. |
|
Miller was a persistent critic not of commerce, but of the commercial ethic as an all-embracing ideology. |
|
Yet, despite being a harsh critic of the boondoggling ways of the administration, he has been more than tolerated by the powers that be. |
|
But as any music critic will tell you, diversity and disparateness doesn't equal interesting stories. |
|
The critic called her a paranoiac and mystifier, and she became an emblem of revolt against conservative art. |
|
A great critic has the ability to make the individual voice become a collective one. |
|
Mencken was a controversial satirical journalist and pungent critic of American life. |
|
He is an introvert type of guy and is critic of the current Nepalese political situation. |
|
A damning critic of the United Nations, he was also the Senate's champion of international law. |
|
A good art critic is able to bring up for discussion the issues and implications that are inherent in a film, book, or album. |
|
The great defender of traditional liturgy could also be its critic when he thought the fog of incense was merely hiding a vacancy at the altar. |
|
It's enough for even a completely and utterly objective food critic to allow herself a few fist pumps. |
|
A long-standing critic of the festival, The Gazette had itself astonished readers three years earlier by changing step. |
|
A crucial element of Fiedler's brilliance as a critic was the generous capaciousness of his responses. |
|
The picture by Picasso could have been admired by an unprejudiced critic a thousand years ago, and will be a thousand years hence. |
|
One critic once said that George Eliot was the only English writer who was into sermonising and moral platitudes. |
|
In this book, the irreverent British art critic slashes his way through the New York art scene from the 1960s to recent times. |
|
|
The Philosopher Igal Kvart has been a persistent critic of the claim that it is possible to analyze counterfactuals without using causation. |
|
Anybody's list of cricket writers would include the formidable Marxist critic CLR James and the immortal Neville Cardus. |
|
This book provides a brilliant resource for any critic of the system, socialist or otherwise. |
|
Being a film critic is nice work if you can get it, but sometimes hazard pay seems more than fair. |
|
The restaurant critic also noted the unbuttered frozen peas that were cold and the vapid vichyssoise that tasted commercially made. |
|
Because he is the first critic I have met in my life whose philosophy, transcribed into those essays, bruises and bloodies one. |
|
The postmodern media critic once asserted that this conflict did not happen, and was only a televised simulation of a war. |
|
Alexander Jacoby is a British film critic whose particular interests include Japanese cinema and silent film. |
|
Threatening to sue in order to silence a critic has simply spread the criticism much, much farther. |
|
A massive car bomb attack has claimed the life of another prominent critic of Syria. |
|
It would be hubristic for any critic to think he is absolutely right and the mainstream record-buying public are absolutely wrong. |
|
Look at what happened to one chatterer, who not long ago was playing the critic in the New York Times. |
|
To become a fluent writer, she argues, one must silence the critic early in the process. |
|
However much the carping critic may protest that this is the mixture as before, the public continues to pack every house. |
|
The critic is the professional misinterpreter, with whose errors you might compare your own more tolerant or modest appreciation of fiction. |
|
Alan could be as ferocious and mocking a critic as the sharp-tongued Sebastian. |
|
There is fleeting footage of everyone from Nick Cave to New Order, but one critic dismissed it as a structureless muddle. |
|
She spoke out repeatedly against U.S. imperialism and was a powerful critic of racism, sexism, and homophobia on the campus. |
|
Even so censorious a critic as Ruskin saw them as useful in an age hungry for popular information. |
|
Later, it was torched by an angry critic who, having set light to the structure, could not escape, and died in the flames he had lit. |
|
|
Intentionally rough, the bluff critic reacts here as well to the spectacular reception of the poem. |
|
A critic is not supposed to discuss new poetry without overtly praising or categorically condemning it. |
|
Should a critic drop her defences in the face of soft journalism, thumbnail description and popular explanation? |
|
He's a critic who sees himself as the aggrieved victim of the news media and second-guessers. |
|
I always think of shows like this whenever a local media critic starts talking about the ranters on AM talk radio. |
|
But he is the kind of critic who can hear the difference and thereby help us hear it too. |
|
It takes real guts to stop being just a critic of the system and come up with solutions, both practical and theoretical. |
|
The senior senator from West Virginia has been a persistent critic of the administration's justifications. |
|
His career as a film critic provides particularly revealing clues about his desire to collect. |
|
Those who know him as a postcolonial critic know only a small part of his many-sidedness. |
|
A good or bad review by a fashion writer or food critic for example can make or break a designer or restaurant. |
|
Too many times, we see a critic veer off the page to ream an author for the facts of his or her life. |
|
In a major performance in 1983 in a prominent American city, the critic reviewing the concert crucified the entire recital. |
|
A slimming guru has received an award from a no-longer-so heavyweight TV critic for bringing Weight Watchers classes to Rochdale. |
|
Such cynical micro-analysts of human behaviour must suffer when the ravenous critic inevitably turns inward. |
|
As one critic sardonically put it, their dollar salaries rise in inverse proportion to the obscurity of their work. |
|
Not surprisingly, the avowedly liberal author was a trenchant critic of the decision to intervene militarily. |
|
The single greatest critic of the British Empire, Edmund Burke, was an archconservative who saw imperialism as an essentially radical project. |
|
At least one other critic agreed with me that the penultimate scene wasn't the heartbreaker it should have been in this production. |
|
The slur made by your critic is a very serious and damaging one to the organization and its unconditional generosity. |
|
|
And I'd have missed it entirely if our architecture critic hadn't passed along a heads-up. |
|
I usually tune into a show only after my critic chums have geeked out over it so often that I feel naked without an opinion. |
|
But it should only be attempted if the critic first honors the poem's literalness, because the poem's cold power is in its literalness. |
|
Could this have anything to do with the roasting he gave the New Yorker's film critic recently? |
|
The critic reported that this disclaimer brought a roar of laughter from the audience with which she watched the film. |
|
Since then, every TV critic has savaged it, although it's like shooting fish in a barrel. |
|
Carey was a critic of the deductive method of analysis and the Ricardian rent theory in particular. |
|
He was a pungent, if inevitably covert, critic of Nazism, a discerning analyst of the ills of our age and our best hope of a cure for them. |
|
Will his subsequent role as a leading critic of the war enhance this theme, undercut it, or have little impact? |
|
The mystery critic offers constructive suggestions for making Elena's purple prose even more enticing. |
|
French philosopher and social critic Paul Virilio writes on the upcoming French referendum on the European constitution. |
|
Sarah has been an incisive critic of my work, an unequalled friend in moments of self-doubt, and an eident copy-editor. |
|
Aranganathan, a writer and literary critic of repute, has written an article on Paa.Visalam's book. |
|
A brief stint as an art editor and critic saw Peeradina reviewing books, plays and movies. |
|
In Warsaw, the jazz critic Leopold Tyrmand popularized the wearing of striped socks as well. |
|
Its hard for a critic not to find fault, kind of removes the point really. |
|
Dormois, like The Economist, is a critic of French economic policy. |
|
This caused many to wonder why he chose to be a critic of other men's ideas rather than an expositor of his own, as well as to wonder what ideas he truly believed in himself. |
|
Similarly, Picasso reportedly replied to a critic that his painting of a red bull's head was not a portrait of Facism, but simply a picture of a red bull. |
|
And now, combing for music to keep me going, this sniffy critic includes songs she would never otherwise listen to. |
|
|
The task of the textual critic is to detect and, so far as possible, undo these effects. |
|
In the meantime, you may savor the irony of how this inveterate critic of liberal media bias exposed his own bias in such an extraordinary manner. |
|
He has staked out his claim for being a great critic through portentousness, pomposity, and extravagant pretension, and, from all appearances, seems to have achieved it. |
|
He once told the film critic David Robinson that he derived the most pride from a back-handed compliment paid by an American critic. |
|
The critic might be sitting in row seven, but there are people in the upper circle who also need to hear. |
|
No critic had ever come at Updike so relentlessly, viciously, and articulately as Wood. |
|
This vigorous abuse was no doubt amusing for the critic and his readers, and is now amusing again for us, in all its confident mistakenness. |
|
Powell had been the fiercest critic of the 1948 Nationality Act, which gave all imperial subjects the right of entry into Britain. |
|
He was a terrific comedian, an important social critic because he made his criticisms aloud. |
|
He also was a social critic deeply rooted in the 2nd-century cultural milieu. |
|
Like many the social critic since, Plato would cheerfully have banned types of music that he considered corrupting. |
|
Cardinal Sin, however, has long been a critic of the high-living president. |
|
Lifelikeness is a cardinal virtue of the novel, according to the great critic James Wood. |
|
You will be a sterner critic than are those who pass judgment on your work. |
|
My goodness, he is the trade critic for the Liberal Party and he should know this stuff. |
|
The coverage cast Mankiw as a reasonable critic and a moderate. |
|
Fortunately, they exercised enough good judgment not to make him critic for the status of women as well. |
|
She was known as a translator of the French autobiographer Michel Leiris and the philosopher and critic Maurice Blanchot. |
|
The laudation is being held by art critic Hans-Joachim Müller before an invited audience of some 400 guests at the Kunsthaus Zürich. |
|
Few men are more contemptible than the brilliantly censorious critic who is deliberately wounding just for the sake of a witticism. |
|
|
A critic is often portrayed as a saboteur, and one with foreign friends is a spy. |
|
John Ashbery, the critic from the New York Herald Tribune, wrote a favorable if concise review, but the French press was underwhelmed. |
|
A freelance author, literary critic and web practitioner, he lives and works in Lucerne and Zurich. |
|
Sandra Leis is a literary critic and head of the culture section at the daily newspaper Der Bund in Berne. |
|
Conservative hit man turned liberal media critic David Brock, spotted smoking an e-cigarette in the lobby. |
|
In 1936, the Marxist critic published his most celebrated essay. |
|
A reader senses both storyteller and critic fighting for full expression on the page, one facet overlaying the other. |
|
Back then, the immigration critic and member for Calgary-Nose Hill was dead set against such an idea. |
|
Had he not chosen to attend Law school, he would be a disc jockey, a music critic or he would own a nightclub. |
|
The chief goodie is Robert Parker, an American wine critic who has promoted many garagistes. |
|
If there is only one witness to a text, collation and recension are synonymous, and the critic passes straight to examination and emendation. |
|
The Alliance justice critic made many good points yesterday that were well worth reading. |
|
The one who is probably the only severe critic of such profligacy here is not even given a single assistant! |
|
A speculative citizen of the world, he wrote in an ornate style and, as one critic said, delighted in mirroring the macrocosm in a microcosm. |
|
It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled or where the doer of deeds could have done better. |
|
The justice critic just reminded me that at committee last week Liberals saved the bill when the Conservatives voted against it in a voice vote. |
|
I am very heartened by the fact that the opposition critic for finance now says the act will be passed in time. |
|
The New Yorker critic takes on smartasses who think they are being witty in an excerpt from his new book, Snark. |
|
Another red herring put forward by this critic is an allegation that consultation did not take place prior to this new Act being drafted. |
|
Speaking ahead of the lecture, the critic launched a scathing attack on the contemporary British art scene dismissing Brit Art as a journalistic invention. |
|
|
But the critic from The Province came with his wife and had a bird. |
|
The latter is after all a stern critic of positivism and scientism. |
|
Let me quote John Steinbruner, another critic of ballistic missile defence, to make my next argument. |
|
From the early 1980s onwards, Murdoch's best-selling daily, the Sun, has been a persistent critic of the European Union and all its works. |
|
Drying the hypocotyls is one of the most critic stages within the production process. |
|
I love looking at them and, to paraphrase the film critic Serge Daney, images look at me. |
|
A black friend on his left and another on his right, immersed in a very serious discussion, as a film critic recalled. |
|
Richard Martin was an outstanding scholar, lecturer, critic and curator of many critically acclaimed costume exhibitions. |
|
In exercising their function as critic and watchdog, the media must always remain mindful of their responsibilities. |
|
Hayer was an outspoken critic of Sikh extremism and a potential witness at the Air India trial. |
|
Veteran film critic for The Wall Street Journal Julie Salamon presents a juicy inside look at the making of the Hollywood mega-flop Bonfire of the Vanities. |
|
One critic applauded this famous man for revealing his ugliness. |
|
He remained a critic of censorship, a bon viveur, and a raffish wit. |
|
He was a negative critic of the economist's theoretical soundness. |
|
Revered by many of today's generation of poets, Stephens was generally considered a spoken word pioneer, not to mention an often caustic literary critic for the Mirror. |
|
One's delight at discovering that a personally loved film received well-reasoned praise from one critic turns to infuriation when it is dismissed or minimized by another. |
|
Regular readers might get the impression I'm a critic of technology, but the information age has given me so many opportunities that I feel duty-bound to support it. |
|
The critic Frank Kermode corrected our mistranslation of Aristotle's word hamartia, suggesting that a more accurate and useful interpretation would be missing the mark. |
|
Directed by fellow Chicagoan Steve James, Life Itself is a worthy tribute to the most popular film critic ever. |
|
Perhaps even as acerbic a critic as Kennan might have been pleased by the result. |
|
|
At the same time, Zaretsky shows, Camus was an early and fierce critic of French policy towards the Algerian Arabs. |
|
Film critic David Ehrlich continues his annual tradition of making a supercut of his favorite films of the year. |
|
In the film, his pals fondly recall the critic bringing through a carousel of unattractive women. |
|
I hate to carve up a book into parcels, to evaluate art with that crass finality of the food critic judging course after course. |
|
Caryn James is film critic for Marie Claire magazine and contributes to T he New York Times Book Review. |
|
But I was chagrined when a critic praised some of my dialogue when it was simply a phrase I borrowed from a real-life Chicago pol. |
|
Reasoning for the ordinary and quotidian experiences of observation, Diderot demanded not only the artist but also the art critic to be liberated from the studio model. |
|
Since generations of juniors will be jonesing for this film, there is really nothing negative this critic can say to dissuade you from potential ownership. |
|
The prep-school-teacher-turned-cultural critic drives working mothers to fits with contrarian essays on modern domestic life. |
|
The auteur critic is obsessed with the wholeness of art and artist. |
|
One critic has rightly described them as our real National Theatre. |
|
Literary pedigree is or should be a valid concern for any writer or for any critic considering that writer. |
|
Second, you can't win with an irrational critic like Bowers. |
|
I tried to explain my doubtless feeble joke, but my critic was having none of it, delivering her rebuke and, having had her stern say, ringing off. |
|
A critic may also question why other important topics, such as intelligence and reconnaissance, air-sea rescue, and helicopters, were not covered in separate monographs. |
|
The whole world of criticism and reviewing has been debased because the critic now is pressured to perform as part publicist. |
|
A good literary critic is not a political ideologue or policy wonk. |
|
Sabina Sehgal Saikia, a prominent restaurant critic and mother of two, stayed huddled in her magnificent suite. |
|
I'm a feminist science fiction critic who is married to an alien. |
|
A critic should not balk at savaging what is bad just as he does not shy from praising what is good. |
|
|
The moment the critic thinks of a lyric, she is thinking not only about how it is immersed in conditions for thought but also how it allegorizes them. |
|
New York Times art critic Michael Kimmelman lambasted the process as an ineffective means for choosing a design for a public memorial, or any architectural space. |
|
A remorseless critic in Kraus's own mould might well argue that if you were wrong about Dreyfus it wouldn't matter too much what you were right about. |
|
For the past forty years critic James Wolcott has been a cerebral antidote to the dullness contaminating our cultural pages. |
|
Like most industry insiders, renowned architecture critic Hugh Pearman is eagerly anticipating an epic battle culminating in a wonderful icon for the city of Glasgow. |
|
Let me return the compliment by noting that I consider Mooney a thoughtful and fair-minded critic of conservatism. |
|
But the French critic Louis de Fourcaud, writing in the gazette des Beaux-Arts, called it a masterpiece of characterization. |
|
But the real function of a critic is to see what is truly good and go bananas when he sees it. |
|
I'd probably be a food critic or a food taster because I like pies! |
|
The late art critic was known for passionately baroque pronouncements that moved the immovably overstuffed art world. |
|
Greste has also taken a stand in prison as a staunch critic of what has transpired. |
|
Tired of being a poster child for stingy salaries, Walmart snarkily takes a leading left-wing critic to task. |
|
He was an outspoken critic of the show when it began, mostly because it scuttled his own plans for a Galactica reboot that would pick up where the 1978 version left off. |
|
As critic and editor, Stephens showed a partiality for minor lyricists, like Daley and Quinn, and allowed personal feelings to cloud his judgment on occasions. |
|
Food critic Todd Kliman exposes the ridiculous double standard of the locavore movement and how they ignore great American wines. |
|
He is hardly alone in using a locution that should nevertheless be retired, a charitable critic might have explained. |
|
Stephen Bayley, cultural critic and Londoner, said the fresh, foreign impetus had left London unrivaled. |
|
Media critic Jennifer L. Pozner talks to nine comedians about C.K., tosh, and whether feminism and comedy are natural combatants. |
|
What if a critic trashes something that is really close to you? |
|
But, the critic in Byatt seemingly won't let any detail go unexhausted. |
|
|
He could come off as simply out of touch, like a critic reared on whistler going after Picasso. |
|
He could not assume that a reader or critic would grasp the unusualness and special, idiosyncratic effect of his verse merely by observing the words on the page. |
|
The expert opinion attached to the report reads like an article by a movie critic and not by a pathologist. |
|
Contestabile has been a vehement critic of the controversial law. |
|
It took artist and critic Peter Plagens a long time to come around to the post-modern work of Bruce Nauman. |
|
Music critic and former MTV News anchor Kurt Loder pays tribute to the prickly, brilliant Velvet Underground front man. |
|
Well, the United States government has been a very vocal critic of the human rights situation in the country, but it's not just the United States government. |
|
These writings revealed a first-rate sensibility, a critic ready to stick his neck out and make the necessary judgments, sometimes with acerbity, often with a humorous irony. |
|
This is the natural headspace for a pop critic who has made the jump to the bookshelf from the blurb-littered world of book, CD and film reviews in glossy magazines. |
|
For a writer, being panned by a critic can be the last straw, as you nervously bring your inky pride and joy into public view after umpteen years of sweat and sacrifice. |
|
Think about a powerful government official leaking sensitive classified information to the press solely to discredit a critic of the government's policy. |
|
I think my most persistent critic is a certain Straussian who nonetheless often circulates to others particular posts of mine that he considers particularly good. |
|
But a persistent critic could argue that this showed how skillfully the participant, the caller, and the hidden accomplice had devised the deception. |
|
The critic succeeds in overturning the presumption if she can show that the presumption's unassailability has served only to mask its indefensibility. |
|
One critic says his tongue could fillet a fish, and this week he comes to New Zealand to headline the Comedy Festival and perform solo shows in Auckland and Christchurch. |
|
Insofar as Markson poses questions in an inverse order, the critic and the author appear in a perspective which inscribes voice within an economy of representation. |
|
There are a number of ways a postcolonial critic can function. |
|
Its relative accessibility was cited as a positive counter-example by a critic in 1747 when he criticized the Crown for keeping its art treasures behind closed doors. |
|
When Archer resigned as art critic of The World in 1886 he secured the succession for Shaw. |
|
Shaw contributed more than 150 articles as theatre critic for The Saturday Review, in which he assessed more than 212 productions. |
|
|
In addition, Gilbert was the London correspondent for L'Invalide Russe and a drama critic for the Illustrated London Times. |
|
I cannot keep in shape, represent the people of Hochelaga, be the critic for justice, take care of Montreal and do the bar exams all at the same time. |
|
New York Times TV critic Jack Gould praised Manning's performance as Hamlet. |
|
The official opposition critic on health will know my passion for the issue of a national wellness program, for example, and there are other issues that are important to me as well, such as caregiving and seniors. |
|
During World War II, Bell was an outspoken critic of saturation bombing. |
|
Brian Grison is an artist, university drawing instructor, art historian and art critic who lives in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. |
|
After all, the critic, and especially the critic who perches in high journalistic places, needs to have a space in which he can insert himself and do the explicatory work he offers to a world presumed to be in need of it. |
|
The Prince, a longstanding critic of Modernism, endorses a version of Classicism that is close to pastiche. |
|
Publisher Nicholas Rowe was the first critic to ponder the theme of the play, which he saw as the just punishment of the two feuding families. |
|
The North American art critic Clement Greenberg was the leading prolocutor of formalism during this time. |
|
In Updike, literary critic Adam Begley offers the first full-length biography on a larger-than-life American writer. |
|
Third, and perhaps counterintuitively, Washington needs not emerge as a singular critic of Venezuela. |
|
In a long overdue full-length study, art critic Matthew Kangas brings to life the art of Robert Sperry. |
|
Pham Thanh Nghien has been a vocal critic of the authorities in Vietnam, publishing several essays online and appearing frequently on Radio Free Asia to criticise government violations of human rights. |
|
After more than a year of writing Happy Hour blog mails, I realise that deep down, I'm a critic at heart, but with more weight than journalists who often have to keep to a specific theme. |
|
During this period he also undertook his first journalistic work, as a freelance art and literary critic. |
|
Today, the conclusion is flagrant: those children are fare from receiving a good education, their healthy condition is critic and the muslin teaching is transformed into bad treatments. |
|
In addition to her museum experience, she has a background as a critic and writer, and continues to write on contemporary and modern art for a variety of independent projects. |
|
He became a trenchant critic both of capitalism and of many aspects of socialism. |
|
Prestigious food critic Ramsey Michel books in and Carl plans a new tasting menu with sous chef Tony, line cook Martin and hostess Molly. |
|
|
While the work of the critic and the press office should be diametrically opposed, there is a common ground in searching for a way to describe what a performance or piece of work is like to people who haven't seen it. |
|
However, according to the poet and critic Kathleen Raine, despite the supreme quality of his art, he has never at any time been widely-read. |
|
But he returned again and again to the posed naked figure, male and female – the ultimate test and validation, so the critic Robert Hughes has stated, of any artist's merit and painterly ability. |
|
The critic gave rave reviews to the adapter of the ancient play, who worked to give the text more relevance to the modern day. |
|
Of Shaw's various reviewing activities in the 1880s and 1890s it was as a music critic that he was best known. |
|
If hypocrisy was the English vice, as the French critic Taine declared, then it had soon become naturalized in the United States. |
|
During her lifetime, Lady Sayer was another outspoken critic of the damage which she perceived that the army was doing to the moor. |
|
Siegfried Kracauer was to be a particularly vocal critic in the twenties of the shift in perception brought on by the illustrateds. |
|
A critic felt leaving patients waiting in pain longer than clinically necessary should be unacceptable. |
|
The powerful Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Arundel, is said to have voiced his fears of Cheyne's reputation as a critic of the Church. |
|
Though he was not yet an MP at the time of the 2003 vote, Miliband was a strong critic of the Iraq War. |
|
Since then he has been a harsh critic of clumsy bank policies and argued that no one should be able to do what he did. |
|
Coleridge was probably the earliest critic to introduce gender issues to the analysis of this play. |
|
The American critic Yvor Winters suggested in 1939, an alternative canon of Elizabethan poetry. |
|
He was a fierce critic of the poverty and social stratification of Victorian society. |
|
In 1994, literary critic Harold Bloom placed Eliot among the most important Western writers of all time. |
|
Julia was the niece of poet and critic Matthew Arnold and the sister of Mrs. |
|
Other early documented uses of the phrase are from reviews by critic Mike Saunders. |
|
Creem critic Lester Bangs is credited with popularizing the term via his early 1970s essays on bands such as Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath. |
|
Film critic Roger Ebert praised the film for introducing new perspectives and ideas on the issues of morality and guilt. |
|
|
In addition to London, since 1997 McQueen has a home in Amsterdam, with his Dutch wife, cultural critic Bianca Stigter, and their two children. |
|
This was a surprise appointment, as Clough had been an outspoken critic of Revie and the team's tactics. |
|
Disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of Peel's government, often deliberately taking positions contrary to those of his nominal chief. |
|
His second play, The Birthday Party, closed after eight performances, but was enthusiastically reviewed by critic Harold Hobson. |
|
After being educated at schools in Nottingham and Yorkshire, Stoppard became a journalist, a drama critic and then, in 1960, a playwright. |
|
Conversely, cultural critic and literary scholar Michael Gurnow views the novel from a Rousseauian perspective. |
|
For others, such as art critic Robert Hughes, postmodernism represents an extension of modernism. |
|
Waugh wrote reports on Union debates for both Oxford magazines, Cherwell and Isis, and he acted as a film critic for Isis. |
|
Larkin was a notable critic of modernism in contemporary art and literature. |
|
Jeremy Brett is considered the definitive Holmes by critic Julian Wolfreys. |
|
In the same year the critic William Archer suggested a collaboration, with a plot by Archer and dialogue by Shaw. |
|
From 1895 to 1898, Shaw was the theatre critic for The Saturday Review, edited by his friend Frank Harris. |
|
Olivier defended Burton by retaliating that he too received the same kind of review by the same critic for the same role. |
|
Time magazine critic derided The Rains of Ranchipur and even went as far as to say Richard was hardly noticeable in the film. |
|
Despite being a persistent critic of some of the government's policies, the paper supported Labour in both subsequent elections the party won. |
|
Furthermore, he drifted to the right of the Liberal party and became a bitter critic of its policies. |
|
The literary critic Alexander Welsh suggests that Scott exhibits similar preoccupations within his own novels. |
|
The Prince also recently met Pius Ncube, the Archbishop of Bulawayo, an outspoken critic of the government. |
|
His book on Modern Tragedy may be read as a response to The Death of Tragedy by the conservative literary critic George Steiner. |
|
Architecture critic Lewis Mumford devoted a large part of a chapter of his 1964 book The Highway and the City to Portmeiron, which he called. |
|