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197 Sentences With "canonized"

How to use canonized in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "canonized" and check conjugation/comparative form for "canonized". Mastering all the usages of "canonized" from sentence examples published by news publications.

All Saints really means ALL saints While many canonized saints are celebrated with their own individual day (such as St. Patrick), saints that have not been canonized have no particular holiday.
Q & A Mother Teresa will be formally canonized on Sept.
There are years that, rightly or wrongly, become canonized, lionized.
Padre Pio died in 1968 and was canonized in 2002.
But the case went forward and d'Youville was canonized on Dec.
The younger children were canonized for a miracle attributed to them.
This was the version that was canonized as the "authentic" dish.
Centuries later, Joan of Arc was canonized as a saint in 1920.
The artist Roy Lichtenstein canonized the object with his Composition II painting.
"The Passion of Joan of Arc" was canonized more or less instantly.
Haring and New York were a 1980s love affair canonized by art history.
Getting the O'Dell treatment meant being canonized in the annals of skateboarding history.
Mother Teresa will be formally canonized on Sunday by Pope Francis in Rome.
When will Mary Magdalene be canonized and when can we have women priests?
Romero, who was gunned down while saying Mass, will be canonized on Oct. 14.
He was 23; he was soon canonized and became the patron saint of youth.
Cabrini, the first naturalized American citizen to be canonized, is the patron saint of immigrants.
While Romero was the highest-profile person canonized this weekend, he's not the only one.
Mother Teresa, one of the 20th century's most visible religious figures, was canonized on Sunday.
The Russian Orthodox Church has canonized him as martyr of an idealized, God-fearing past.
History echoed within my father's name: Ghevont is a canonized orator; Vartan, an honored warrior.
The pope also canonized 30 martyrs who were killed for their faith in Brazil in 1645.
A murdered Salvadoran archbishop associated with social justice and progressive theology was canonized over the weekend.
The candidate is canonized and made a saint proper once a second miracle is verified posthumously.
She was officially canonized in 1920 and is still one of the most popular Catholic saints.
Simply put, anyone who spends their life emulating Jesus and his teachings deserves to be canonized.
Becket was canonized in 1173, and he became one of the most revered saints in England.
Shortly before the meeting in Rome, the Vatican announced that John Henry Newman would be canonized.
She is one of five saints set to be canonized on that date, as NPR explains.
This attitude was canonized when Google emblazoned "Don't Be Evil" on the walls of its headquarters.
John Paul II, who canonized Pio, visited in 1987; and so did Benedict XVI in 2016.
Today Kiefer has long since been canonized, and his name has become a kind of trademark.
Even so, Catholic observances tend to focus on known saints, those canonized by the Catholic Church.
These aren't arbitrary edicts; vexillological expert Ted Kaye canonized them in his book, Good Flag, Bad Flag.
They're treasure troves of embellished or fully fictitious objects that have since become canonized by the imagination.
The American side, canonized as the Abstract Expressionists, responded with excessive emotion, violent brushwork, and epic scale.
She is one of five new saints set to be canonized on that date, as NPR explains.
They changed as Austen's work got canonized and exported, but at first they were chiefly English men.
It is a piece of apocrypha that is ironically the most canonized part of Han's character now.
"When the New Testament was edited and canonized, women's voices like Mary Magdalene were suppressed," Sahlin says.
She brought with her a group of friends, some of whom are former members of her canonized "squad".
The Oracle of Omaha has been canonized by many, but few of his disciples compare to Joel Greenblatt.
She was canonized alongside Richard Yates and Raymond Carver, and her own heroes, William Carlos Williams and Chekhov.
But her work has been canonized by museums and galleries, and feminist slogans are enshrined on T-shirts.
They explained how they had several images of the deceased Pope, who was canonized in 2014, in their house.
Teen magazines—canonized as packed with dating tips and eye candy for young, heterosexual, female readers—have gone queer.
Let us gaze upon its glory yet again: Lionel Messi will surely be canonized soon for this saintly act.
On a switchback-filled hike canonized by Jack Kerouac, daredevils can channel their inner beatnik on Desolation Peak Trail.
But as with any reboot, a recreation of something now canonized has the potential to ruin the reputations of both.
His method of sexual misconduct has been canonized, almost, especially because so many of his accusers have strikingly similar stories.
When the Pope died, in 2005, traditionalist Catholics called for him to be canonized, and he was, within eight years.
Kroetz was canonized early on as a writer, blessed by the support of the esteemed German publishing house Suhrkamp Verlag.
The artist's work has been canonized, and feminist slogans are enshrined on T-shirts, but where does that leave her?
In 2009, Philoumenos was canonized by the Holy and Sacred Synod of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, and is now a saint.
You get John Wieners, one of the youngest exemplars of "The New American Poetry" as canonized by Donald Allen in 1960.
He was never officially canonized by Rome as a saint, although his local fans did elect him to sainthood by acclamation.
He's canonized for his music, but Nirvana's Kurt Cobain was interested in visual art long before he picked up a guitar.
Part of this effort was the announcement that Mother Teresa of Calcutta would be canonized as a saint, this coming September.
Even recipes that have been around long enough to become codified and canonized are often the result of migration and appropriation.
As a prequel, it burrows into one of the most picked over, obsessed-upon, fan-fictionalized, head-canonized story universes ever built.
Founded in 1892 in Greenwich Village by Frances Xavier Cabrini, who was later canonized, the hospital was originally known as Columbus Hospital.
The Catholic Church even has a feast, All Saints' Day, on November 1 to honor the countless saints who aren't formally canonized.
Though Shakespeare has been canonized as the literary genius, the prose and themes Kartel explores within his lyrics are just as sophisticated.
Maximilian Kolbe, a Polish Franciscan friar who volunteered to die in place of a stranger in 1941 and was canonized in 1982.
"This Op-Ed reads like the writings of someone who eventually wants to come out, reveal themselves and be canonized," she said.
Saint Teresa of Kolkata, as she is now known, was canonized by Pope Francis in front of about 120,191 faithful at the Vatican.
Once the person is canonized, the Pope leads a special mass and their name is added to the official canon of recognized saints.
Each of these works makes one want to reconsider the male-centered, canonized accounts of abstract sculpture's development in the past few decades.
"Mother Cabrini, who was born in Lombardy in 1850, was canonized as St. Francesca Xavier Cabrini on July 7, 1946," Mr. Moscow wrote.
Denton, for his part, may be the 21st century's Oscar Wilde: hounded, brought down—but eventually canonized for being ahead of his time.
It demonstrated that the male-centric, canonized accounts of the development of post-war, abstract sculpture have unjustifiably left aside many brilliant women artists.
In the now-de-canonized expanded universe, Han had saved Chewie from Imperial slavery — and was promptly booted from the Empire as a result.
A halo of rays with no circle was often used in medieval art to signify a beatified holy person who was not yet canonized.
The Church of St. John Coltrane In the 1980s, the saxophonist was venerated and canonized by a congregation affiliated with the African Orthodox Church.
How do you reconcile the historical Joan, burned for heresy and canonized for faith, with Shaw's Joan, a martyr for the cause of freethinking?
That movie, Matilda, portrays a love affair by the last Russian tsar, Nikolas II, who was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 2000.
So I thought about ELLA, and how she would be referred to if she were understandably canonized: She would be ST. ELLA, or STELLA.
Martin de Porres was canonized by Pope John XXIII in 1962, and he became known as the patron saint of harmony between the races.
Getsy suggests that most performance artists canonized in art history are those who have collaborated with art institutions or given into the art market.
Mother Teresa is due to be canonized as a saint in the Catholic Church on September 4, giving her an official place in Catholic dogma.
He also canonized Marguerite Bays (1815-1879) a Swiss lay woman who was said to have the stigmata, the five wounds of the crucified Jesus.
"Two Acres" is widely believed to have been written for Daphne; Cecil, killed in battle, is canonized as a poet of patriotism and heterosexual love.
Just like that, Keaton's been canonized alongside Michelle Pfeiffer, Ian McKellen, Tom Hiddleston, Tom Hardy, and anyone who's played a Joker without wearing face tattoos.
"I was over the moon excited because having your portrait done as an artist by Chuck Close is tantamount to being canonized," Ms. Brown said.
At 7D, "Fitzgerald canonized" had me thinking at first about good ol' F. Scott, but I couldn't make that work in the six-letter entry.
"When the whole translation is given a neat name and canonized, like the King James Version, it's easy to forget about the interstitial layer," Ye said.
Canonized history has a habit of saying more with what it doesn't show than with what it does, selectively exaggerating achievements as well as concealing crimes.
In 1995, Goldie canonized the drum-and-bass sound with his airy, sweeping début, "Timeless"; the album's central single, "Inner City Life," is as alluring as ever.
That is partly because she met often with Pope John Paul II, himself canonized in 2014, who told her to visit him whenever she was in Rome.
"It's been seen by thousands, including three saints," said Mr. Ianni, naming Mother Teresa and two popes, Paul VI and John Paul II, who have been canonized.
Or the de-canonized "Yub Nub," sung by Ewoks to celebrate the Rebel victory, which passed from memory into the West with the release of the Special Edition.
Jack is successful because the Beatles' songs, removed from their original context, still maintain the universal, instant appeal that has canonized them in our non-fictional world, offscreen.
Though "selfie" was the Oxford English Dictionary's Word of the Year way back in 2013, it had yet to be canonized in the form of a public sculpture.
Her Thomas More -- canonized in 1935 and glorified by Robert Bolt's 1960 play, 'A Man For All Seasons' -- is in Mantel's telling a bloodthirsty theocrat, a biblical fundamentalist.
This perspective is sensitive to the plights of those typically ignored by canonized historical accounts: women, African-Americans, non-English speaking people, non-European immigrants, and the poor.
Classical music audiences have heard Schumann's song cycle "Dichterliebe" hundreds of times, a love-weary tale immortalized and canonized in the voices of dozens of great lieder interpreters.
But it was her turn to radical empathy, as an expression of devout faith, that remains her legacy, the reason many have argued she ought to be canonized.
Another employee from the center, set up by the late Mother Teresa -- who was canonized as St. Teresa in 2016 -- was also arrested in connection to alleged trafficking cases.
It's where the 14-year-old Marie-Bernarde Soubirous, later canonized as St. Bernadette, said she saw the Virgin Mary appear in a grotto on this day in 1858.
VATICAN CITY — Mother Teresa, the nun who devoted her life to the impoverished and one of the Catholic Church's most iconic figures, was canonized as a saint on Sunday.
The idea of Johnny Marr reborn as a Mariachi is seductive, and, considering that the people of Mexico have essentially canonized Moz, this band was bound to happen sometime.
Our popular culture is overripe everywhere with under-edited and incautiously canonized ex-geniuses, but for blithering smugness and abject doofery there is just no one like Big Luke.
With new commentary and ephemera, the punk subculture of the time is revitalized and canonized in a 500-page glossy art book Slash's founders never imagined could be realized.
When it came to the ways in which writers were canonized, she was passionately exasperated by a myopic chronicling of a life, rather than an interrogation of the work.
"Minimalism" was eventually canonized as an art-historical movement, but the name came to mean something different as it was adopted into consumer culture and turned into a class signifier.
"Some Italian passers-by," Fraser tells us with her understated panache, "believing that a new saint had been canonized, struck their breasts with the invocation Santa Emancipatione, ora pro nobis."
Soon after, Foster joined Davis's electric band, and participated in a string of recordings that have not been as thoroughly canonized, but nonetheless left an indelible mark on American music.
He announced on Saturday that Óscar Romero, a Salvadoran bishop shot and killed by right-wing forces for preaching against military oppression and American meddling, would be canonized in October.
FÁTIMA, Portugal — Pope Francis canonized two Portuguese shepherd children during a Mass on Saturday, a century after the children and their cousin said they first saw the Virgin Mary here.
A repertory that has canonized the racist caricature of Monostatos in "The Magic Flute" and the misogyny of "Così" can surely find at least a modest place for Salieri's creations.
Tannon Penland: The devil, along with the many complexities surrounding canonized concepts of hell as applied to social corralling, has always been a significant muse for metal and a great attraction.
Because prior to their trip to Dallas, Drew Brees made SI's cover, he practically had a poem written in stats for him, and his fellow Saints had all but canonized him.
The key figures in this movement were SS. Francis, Antony, John of Capistrano and Bernardino of Siena, who was canonized with astonishing quickness, just six years after his death in 14803.
Pope John Paul II, who was canonized in 2014, is the only pope to have been born in Poland, and he remains one of the nation's most revered and cherished figures.
It keeps all the aesthetic trappings that we've nostalgically canonized over the years—the unmistakable chatter of Combine soldiers, the still-conceptually terrifying headcrabs, an emphasis on playing with physics, etc.
That would be Jordan Belfort, the disgraced 1990s stockbroker canonized by Leonardo DiCaprio in the 2013 film "The Wolf of Wall Street," Martin Scorsese's biggest international box office success to date.
This might be the ultimate contradiction in her work, since her role at the New Yorker, one of the country's premier thought leaders, all but assured her favorites would be canonized.
There's a discrepancy between Roth's relationship with his art — so much of which was never meant to last — and its reception by an art establishment that has canonized the late artist.
The three children the pope canonized before a crowd of tens of thousands in St. Peter's Square were of the Talaxcaltec people, an indigenous pre-Colombian group in what is now Mexico.
This large but understated painting, done in the canonized style of European aristocratic portraiture but with a Mexican subject, was a necessary palate cleanser before taking in the rest of the fair.
The work is a setting of a poem by John Henry Newman, the Victorian divine recently canonized by Pope Francis, and portrays a faithful soul's entry into Purgatory before ascending to Heaven.
Ironically, in their attempts to purge modern art, the Nazis effectively canonized it, helping to draw the world's attention to an entire generation of artists who had been adversely affected by persecution.
It is both a powerful political act, it is a real statement about what it means to be canonized as a woman, or what it means for women to canonize other women.
It exposes a discrepancy between Roth's relationship with his art — so much of which was never meant to last — and its reception by an art establishment that has canonized the late artist.
That's where the city's Parks Department plunked the Joan of Arc memorial, sculpted by Anna Vaughn Hyatt Huntington in 1915, five years before Joan was canonized, eight years before Shaw wrote his play.
Since Santa Muerte is a folk saint, not one who was canonized by the Catholic church, worship of her has been condemned by Cardinal Ravasi, the president of the Pontifical Council for Culture.
Although the film clearly draws its themes and imagery from a number of canonized and apocryphal Biblical stories, the film is really based on a trilogy of science fiction novels published in 173.
Simply put, our society is obsessed with serial killers—particularly white, male ones like Bundy—and we have canonized them as impossible to understand, which allows us to keep making media about them.
Mother Teresa, the Roman Catholic nun and founder of the Missionaries of Charity who was canonized in 2016, worked and lived primarily at the Mother House from 1953 until her death in 1997.
The main objection from the church is that because Czar Nicholas II and his wife were canonized in 2000, the movie is an insult to the faithful, which is a crime in Russia.
France has denied her accusations, but these and other conflicts highlight the delicate nature of queer history-telling, and the struggle to ensure stories are canonized in an inclusive, accurate and mindful way.
There are sure to be works by canonized outsider artists like the Philadelphia Wireman, Howard Finster, and Eugene Von Bruenchenhein, but the new discoveries are always the most gratifying part of the fair.
While she sang, her face contorted into exaggerated, operatic shapes, drawing reference to avant-garde dancer Valska Gert — who shocked German audiences with her parodies of canonized public and cultural figures in the 1920s.
But the armory would be canonized in the annals of culture by the International Exhibition of Modern Art, also known as the Armory Show of 22851, which featured some 21940,225 works by 21946 artists.
We should not overstate the significance of Francis's choice to start the canonization process for these particular saints — after all, he's canonized 892, plenty of whom don't have strong symbolic importance for his papacy.
But a growing network for healthcare in Oklahoma seems to be designed for the individual or family who don't have—or don't want to use—the health insurance canonized by the Affordable Care Act.
It's all reinforced through this consumer culture filter, down to the celebration of self-abuse by those canonized as 'tortured souls,' whether you're talking Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love or Future and Chief Keef.
Were he the son of the rector, that would make him the uncle of Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton, the first American-born woman to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church, Mr. Williams said.
While crusty old bars and last-of-their-kind shops are canonized as living history, the imposing Colonnade Row — less out of place in Rome, perhaps, than in the East Village — remains strangely overlooked.
Just two years earlier, an American-trained battalion had massacred hundreds of people at El Mozote, while in 1980 death squads assassinated Archbishop Oscar Romero — who was recently canonized — while he was celebrating Mass.
"As with any establishment—be they media, church or government—the richest of galleries are canonized, to the point where the public's role and contribution is reduced to passive observer," MoMAR wrote on its website.
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis canonized 35 new Roman Catholic saints on Sunday, including three indigenous children martyred in 16th century Mexico and considered the first Christians killed for their faith in the New World.
The church often brings in the voices of skeptics such as Hitchens during the process to play devil's advocate and look for other causes for miracles, or find reasons that individuals should not be canonized.
Despite (or perhaps because of) the rough end, Wallace has been canonized as a Scottish hero of resistance, and I like to think the Wallace Bay oyster captures something of that never-say-die quality.
The same papers who canonized her in death had in the final months of her life blamed Diana for Dodi al Fayed's jilting of his girlfriend Kelly Fisher and painted her as a voracious harpy.
" Francis paid tribute on Sunday to John XXIII, saying that the pontiff, who was canonized in 2014, had "worked tirelessly to promote fraternal cooperation between all Christians" and to support "the development of ecumenical relationships.
Pope Francis on Sunday canonized two new Catholic saints, Pope Paul VI and slain Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero, saying both men cared for the poor and fought for praiseworthy causes, according to The Associated Press.
If Kubrick's film hadn't been canonized nearly instantly upon its original release and then proven so profitable due to continued interest, it's likely the studio wouldn't have had such rich raw material for this re-release.
As in the case of Mother Teresa, who was canonized Sunday by Pope Francis, miracles are still used as evidence that the candidate is in heaven and had interceded with God in response to a petition.
The Russian Orthodox Church, however, canonized Nicholas, and a young new member of Parliament from Crimea made a pre-emptive strike to block the movie's distribution, claiming the film was an insult to the Orthodox faithful.
In 1997, a Star Wars trading card game gave him a name; a few years later, the ice cream maker Hood carried in that short scene was officially canonized as a database that saved the Resistance.
Whether that relevance is expressed through the actual nominations or via the tough conversations about what is canonized and what isn't, this awards show never fails to provide insight into where we are as a culture.
Mother Teresa, the 1979 Nobel winner canonized by Pope Francis last year, was faulted in 1994 by British medical journal The Lancet for offering neither diagnoses nor strong pain killers to dying patients in her Calcutta hospice.
Instead of a fun adventure where we explore the roots of the Han/Chewie/Lando dynamic, we get 135 minutes of clunky exposition dumps and nods to everything from Aura Sing to oddly canonized throw-away lines.
The problem today is that the Russian Orthodox Church canonized Nicholas II in 2000: Many Orthodox Christians consider the scene, and the suggestion of a premarital affair by the czar, offensive to the point of being heretical.
The late pope, who was canonized as a saint in 2014, was known for his focus on inclusion being the most widely traveled pope in history who was the first to visit both a synagogue and Cuba.
Every beat, every song, and every Whoopi Goldberg one-liner was canonized in the gospel of our school's microculture, and I for one still hold Sister Act 23 to be as good if not better than Citizen Kane.
"Couldn't this little girl be Ireland's first saint canonized since the 13th century?" one committee member rhapsodizes as Anna — yellow with jaundice, swelling with dropsy, unable to make urine, suffering from incipient pneumonia — lies dying before their eyes.
Pope Francis also canonized Pope Paul VI, who is credited with continuing the work begun by Pope John XXIII and bringing the church into the modern era with reforms wrought from the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.
I draw a lot of inspiration from the canonized images in the history of art, and part of that drive comes from a desire to claim these celebrated images of beauty and reinterpret them in my own way.
They have since abandoned my otherwise Crissless feed, but the event has been canonized by Miarren historians who have entered these photos into a Tumblr "miarren masterpost": "Darren and Mia attend friends' pumpkin party," with our photos as evidence.
Charles praised Newman, the first British saint in more than 40 years and the first Englishman born since the 1600s to be canonized, as "this great Briton, this great churchman and, as we can now say, this great saint".
The latter's compositions, the canonized precursors to Cubism, are architectonic, built up from sturdy, layered brushstrokes, while the colors in Degas' monotypes spill across the page in pools and smudges, the shapes more or less coalescing on their own.
Religious activists accused the film's director of blasphemy and the attempt to taint not only the image of the last Russian tsar, murdered by Bolsheviks and later canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church, but also the entire Russian monarchy.
The abbey's venerable reputation as a prestigious resting place dates from the burial of the last Anglo-Saxon king, Edward the Confessor, in 1066 (he was canonized in 1161 and his body was later transferred to a new shrine).
What enabled the Roseanne reboot, then, was simple: a phalanx of costars, writers, and producers emerged who were eager to connect the ethos of the original, now-canonized show with the hunger to "understand" working-class America after the 2016 election.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union and the state atheism it espoused, the church canonized the tsar and his family, and his popularity as a historical figure has grown amid a Russian Orthodox Church resurgence under President Vladimir Putin.
The procedure to have Sheen canonized, known as a sainthood cause, was halted for three years between 2016 and last month because of a legal tug-of-war over his body between the archdioceses of New York and Peoria, Illinois.
This I find is the strength and weakness of Out of Easy Reach: It offers a wide range of vigorous and fascinating responses to the canonized notion of abstraction that I grew up with — largely focused on heroic male figures.
Instead, as she was working on the play that canonized her place in the civil rights movement, she was also writing, under the initials L.H.N. or L.N., letters to "The Ladder," the first subscription-based lesbian publication in the United States.
Though the academy has tried to diversify, white and male voters still make up the majority of its 9,000-member voting pool, which recommends the final list of nominees and therefore determines which parts of American culture deserve to be canonized.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads COLOGNE — There is a sameness that plagues museums around the world today: A small group of canonized artists are exhibited under standardized rubrics within similarly grandiose architecture, separated into antiquity, renaissance, modern, and contemporary.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads KANSAS CITY — Art history rarely gets it right the first time, but the established accounts of American abstraction that canonized particular artists before the paint on their work was dry, is proving particularly vulnerable to criticism.
During Future of Storytelling, which is meant to exhibit and incubate the cutting-edge in narrative media, VR experiences for TV's Silicon Valley and Rick and Morty drew audiences while the Mr. Robot VR experience from 2016 sat canonized inside a nearly empty "Classics" tent.
On Sunday, Francis also canonized Father Faustino Miguez, a Spanish priest who lived in the 19th and 20th centuries, and Father Angelo d'Acri, an Italian itinerant preacher who died in 1739 after serving in some of the most remote areas of mountainous southern Italy.
Her long-canonized late-'60s albums on Atlantic define the sound and sensibility of classic soul music: the piercing quality of Aretha's cries and declamations against the gritty counterpoint of the Muscle Shoals rhythm section's spry, layered mesh of jagged horns and driving backbeat.
Mr. Parker noted that he was acquitted and countered that even more important than his own controversy was the weight of our cinematic moment: Nat Turner, the leader of the most canonized slave rebellion in American history has finally made it to the big screen.
He noted that it was "extraordinary" that: "Romero and Paul VI are being canonized together because, in effect, it is like theory and practice, uniting in one, and that is a great truth for today, putting the poor and the weakest first," he said.
But at the same time, the tricky thing is that generations before us have canonized certain types of stories, and they are almost always male-led and almost always have to do with extremely weighty matters, like murder or violence, often against women, or war.
Watching the films I had never seen (and rewatching a few favorites) over the last three weeks was often frustrating and only sometimes revelatory; some of the canonized work does not hold up, while whole periods of his career I had written off were suddenly more interesting.
The pope also canonized three nuns: Giuseppina Vannini (1859-1911), an Italian who founded a religious order; Mariam Thresia Chiramel Mankidiyn (1876-1926), an Indian who helped the poor; and Dulce Lopes Pontes 1914-1992), a Brazilian who dedicated much of her life to educating workers.
"We thought we were pretty good when we started but we never tried to be something we weren't," Nielsen says, alluding to the fact that despite the band's first few albums eventually being canonized among fans and critics alike, they hardly sold well when first released.
We're conditioned to think of these sorts of films as more "important," since they're what the Oscars have historically canonized, but the result is that the latest crop of movies by women, films that are more human-sized and less murder-strewn, are afforded little awards consideration.
Not content to simply let the instantly canonized live stream of her 2018 Coachella performances stand by themselves, Beyoncé radically reworked video of the concert with behind-the-scenes and private footage to create an impressionistic rumination on black history and art, as well as an autobiography.
A hundred and twenty-seven almost exclusively European and American renditions of human bodies, from very old to recent and from masterpieces to curios, elaborate the thesis that colored figurative sculpture has been unjustly bastardized ever since the Renaissance canonized a mistake made during its excited revival of antiquity.
Saint Nicholas was known for his generosity and numerous miracles attributed to him, and he's thought to have died on December 6, 343 CE. In addition to being canonized (aka recognized as a saint), his memory lives on in the figure of Father Christmas, bringing gifts on Christmas Day.
Radiating from the promenade, named for the recently canonized Albanian nun and bookended by the Yugoslavian-era Grand Hotel and National Theater, is a tangle of streets crowded with cafes, boutiques, fashionable locals, in-the-know internationals and the case for yet another superlative: coolest neighborhood in the Balkans.
The small wooden figure, wearing a crown, clad in resplendent vestments and holding a representation of the baby Jesus, is venerated as a saint — she was canonized by Pope Pius X in 1909 — and is considered by many pilgrims to be capable of healing the sick and performing other miracles.
Thomas Becket consecrated its original chapel in 1169, and Saint Louis himself (Louis IX, who was canonized by the church) founded a convent there in 1259 whose charge was to arrange for the ransom of Christian prisoners captured in Egypt by the forces of the Ayyubid sultan Turan-shah during the ill-fated Seventh Crusade.
At the same time, the militarization of America's police departments continues to be justified by appeals to an idea that was canonized in the aftermath of a $20,000 heist in a small town in California—that if only cops had more firepower, both they and the citizens they are duty-bound to protect would somehow be safer.
But prestige dramas, especially those canonized flagship series that were credited with ushering in the so-called golden age of TV we may or may not still be enjoying, have been so predominantly masculine that the label is still habitually applied to a certain type of po-faced product regardless of whether there's any prestige to it or not.
When Rowling made her announcement in 2007, Albus Dumbledore – already a hero to millions of Harry Potter fans, became instantly canonized in literature as a prolific gay character; one who was not stereotypical or negative, and whose tragic love story with the evil Grindelwald as teens has fascinated Potter fans ever since they learned of it.
The sheer volume of entries in the genre demands a more specific taxonomy: There are the standard-issue comedies (Santa Clause, Jingle All the Way), canonized classics (Miracle on 34th Street and It's a Wonderful Life), Yuletide horror (Black Christmas or the more recent Krampus), and mistletoe-decked rom-coms in the vein of Love Actually.
Mother Teresa, a Nobel Peace Prize winner affectionately known during her lifetime as the "saint of the gutters" for her work among the poor of India and who died in 1997, is due to be officially canonized by Pope Francis on Sunday at a ceremony likely to bring more than 100,000 people to St. Peter's Square.
The martyred Oscar Romero, former archbishop of San Salvador, was made a saint on Sunday morning, alongside six other canonized church figures, including Pope Paul VI. The canonization of Romero — whose Latin American origins and commitment to social justice mirror that of the current pontiff, Pope Francis — is a powerfully symbolic reaffirmation of Francis's own long-held dedication to eradicating wealth inequality.
Canonized in 1920, France's national heroine Joan of Arc — the teenage peasant who led a French resistance against the English during the late stages of the Hundred Years' War — was undergoing something of a revival when a new studio, the Société Générale des Films, approached Dreyer, a Danish director respected for his individuality and seriousness, to make a film about Joan.
At a recent forum, Leonid Reshetnikov, a historian and retired lieutenant general in Russia's foreign intelligence service, described trying to explain to his granddaughter why the city of Yekaterinburg had a church dedicated to the czar and his family, who were canonized by the church, as well as a monument to Yakov Sverdlov, the local Bolshevik commander believed to have ordered them shot there.

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