Paradoxically, the film-making movement which seemed to stand for iconoclasm and freedom became one of the most codified and puritanical. |
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He has moved from iconoclasm to pedestrianism, and is increasingly incoherent. |
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Elite law schools cherish robust debate, iconoclasm, and arguing issues from all sides, right? |
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His iconoclasm is further reflected in his home-schooling of his daughter Samira. |
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His philosophy is a peculiar and wholly subjective patchwork of frustrated sexual fantasies, zany misanthropy, and 1960s hippy-dippy iconoclasm. |
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Despite the come-and-have-a-go iconoclasm of his album's title, MacInnes, 25, is softly spoken, charming and shy. |
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The subversion of the world of art and artistic iconoclasm have become an essential element of contemporary creation. |
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The hard-minded iconoclasm of the media at present was one lasting result of their revolt. |
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Her criticism of the iconoclasm was too stinging and so the press bureau, which had existed since 1950, had to close. |
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Encounters with people such as Picabia, Tristan Tzara, and Dadaists with their iconoclasm had a very clear influence on his work. |
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Though there was iconoclasm at the beginning, as zealots decapitated statues and the like in temples and shrines, this soon passed as sultans cracked down on it. |
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Zen monks are sophisticated enough in their understanding of their tradition to mediate in their daily lives these polarities of structure and transformation, discipline and iconoclasm, learning and bibliophobia, morality and antinomianism. |
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The usage guru Bryan A. Garner told me that he long admired Kilpatrick's pugnaciousness and iconoclasm. |
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The Dutch Rebellion which burst out with the violent iconoclasm of 1566 led to a deep crisis. |
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When Pope Gregory II condemned iconoclasm, the Patriarch in Byzantium, for whom the Roman pontiff was at best primus inter pares, was furious. |
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It affirmed the ecumenical character of the Council of 787 and its decisions against iconoclasm. |
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British fashion is known throughout the world for it tradition and iconoclasm. |
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But surely there's a difference between iconoclasm and the blind, flailing in the dark that might, just might, if she's lucky, cast an idol at Simpleton's feet. |
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The irony and sometimes childish iconoclasm are still there but this is a film in which a burning sense of outrage and frustration also dominate and set the tone. |
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Back in the '60s, the left was the home of humor, iconoclasm, pleasure. |
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Bill's connections are more direct but his statements struck me as an interest in full consideration rather than in character assassination or iconoclasm. |
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We love them for their energy and iconoclasm and straightforwardness, and then get iffy if they put their perception of hurting human realities above convention. |
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No longer the torch-bearer of iconoclasm, the scourge of intellectual hypocrisy, I had become instead mere target practice for Banner Wavers Anonymous. |
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Finally, Middle East specialist and translator Fred Reed explores the rise of militant iconoclasm in Syria in his new non-fiction study Shattered Images. |
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Shot in grainy black and white on a handheld camera and peppered with confrontational jump cuts, Godard's movie epitomised the cool iconoclasm of the New Wave. |
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With the final arranged to coincide with London Fashion Week in September, there is obvious potential for a bit of 1977 iconoclasm, as well as great exposure. |
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Well, Jeff Daniels, who's heavily bearded to indicate his iconoclasm, crashes his plane, and sends his 12-year-old daughter up in an ultralight to finish the goose-guiding. |
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At college, Peirce earned a reputation for arrogance, brilliance, iconoclasm, dangerous mood swings, and dissipation, behaviors owing in part to neurological pathologies. |
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For all their iconoclasm, Stewart and his sidekick-in-sanity, Stephen Colbert, calculate to honor mainstream liberal pieties. |
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The iconoclasm of the Byzantine Isaurian Dynasty was endorsed by the Franks. |
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Where Jerome Robbins's dances had brought athleticism and line to Broadway, and Bob Fosse's had brought iconoclasm and style, Stroman's choreography offered wit and raise-the-roof rambunctiousness. |
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Hence, Schmid rejected the radicals and their iconoclasm, but supported Zwingli's position. |
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Reformers, swayed by the ideas of Zwingli, carried out acts of iconoclasm and banned imagery in churches. |
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It follows, therefore, that desecrating a statue amounts to iconoclasm. |
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Thus pope Stephan III declared nul, in 769, the Council of Hieria of the year 754 which had introduced and blessed the iconoclasm, with the wellknowncatastrophic consequences for the Church of that time? |
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Only when Basel's reformers turned to iconoclasm in the later 1520s did his freedom and income as a religious artist suffer. |
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Scotland's ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm. |
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The glosses and performances that count on the subversive character of broken, ravaged or soiled bodies today belong more to a genre of high-flown camp than to iconoclasm. |
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In some cases clergy and churches were attacked, with iconoclasm stripping the churches of statues and ornament. |
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No one will regret the abominable Taliban regime: these fanatics had pushed to the limit misogyny and iconoclasm typical for monotheistic religions. |
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The defense of icons became a defense of the belief in the Incarnation of Christ, for iconoclasm was one of the ways of denying the reality of this Incarnation. |
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The 16th Century was a period troubled by religious wars, iconoclasm and the painful separation of the Low Countries from the Spanish in the South and the United Provinces in the North. |
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In my iconographic studio Orthodox icons are created rigorously following the Orthodox rules, i.e. the rules established by the Orthodox Church between the 7th and the 9th century, after the turbulent period of iconoclasm. |
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Scotland's ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm, with the almost total loss of medieval stained glass, religious sculpture and paintings. |
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In the early 9th century, Leo V reintroduced the policy of iconoclasm, but in 843 empress Theodora restored the veneration of icons with the help of Patriarch Methodios. |
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At the time, existentialism was the philosophical equivalent of beatnikism, conjuring up images of berets, iconoclasm, and the rejection of status quo values. |
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Iconoclasm is the destruction of art that is disliked for a variety of reasons, including religious ones. |
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The 8th and early 9th centuries were also dominated by controversy and religious division over Iconoclasm, which was the main political issue in the Empire for over a century. |
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