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"libertinage" Definitions
  1. LIBERTINISM

28 Sentences With "libertinage"

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

An insistence on sexual libertinage on the far left doubled as a desire to shock the "bourgeoisie" — even when that libertinage ran up against, or crossed, the bounds of rape.
Most of my time in the gallery I devote to juicy boudoir libertinage.
Accordingly, I find Lebel an international libertinage pearl worth close inspection in today's socio-political context.
And in what sort of play about libertinage do you have to wait 90 minutes for a decent flogging?
The work, "Liberté," centers on a group of French nobles seeking to spread the ideals of "libertinage" at the Prussian court shortly before the French Revolution.
But more than two centuries later, on Tuesday, the French government recognized his work, titled "120 Days of Sodom, or The School of Libertinage," as a national treasure.
Starting from the stigmatizing of the feminine, the visitor works her way through rooms of passion, adoration, gallantry, libertinage, and romanticism; but this historical overview does not seek to be exhaustive nor does it exhaust.
But Love generally feels to me like a series of loosely related theory/fiction lectures that become most interesting when they stray and overreach to the point of self-contradiction, as in the libertinage area, where love and lust are confused.
He has been able to run down one taboo after another with impunity, mocking Senator John McCain for having been captured by the North Vietnamese, shrugging off his complete irreligiosity, flaunting his womanizing and libertinage while seducing a party that claims to hold nothing in higher esteem than our veterans and family values.
Frédéric Lachèvre (1855, Paris – 1943, ibid) was a 20th-century French bibliographer, erudit and literary critic, specialist of libertinage in the XVIIth.
His influence remained fairly large and lasted well into the 1950s; during the fifties his influence began to wane but a number of literary periodicals, especially Libertinage and Tirade remained faithful to a number of ter Braak's ideas.
During the Baroque era in France, there existed a freethinking circle of philosophers and intellectuals who were collectively known as libertinage érudit and which included Gabriel Naudé, Élie Diodati and François de La Mothe Le Vayer. The critic Vivian de Sola Pinto linked John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester's libertinism to Hobbesian materialism.
There is a note on the back of the photograph. Marcel and his nurse (nanny) are playfully arguing about the signature being signed at the bottom. It transforms from Gilberte, to Albertine, to Libertinage. Robert is reading an excerpt from the newspaper to Charlie with whom he has been having an affair.
As a writer he made his debut in 1951 with the short story de Kanonnen, published in the literary magazine Libertinage. Later he wrote short stories for Hollands Weekblad, Hollands Maandblad and De Gids. He wrote several volumes for Querido. From 1965 he wrote a weekly column for NRC Handelsblad using the name Drievoeter.
"Codified Indulgence: The Niceties of Libertine Ethics in Casanova and His Contemporaries" by Peter Cryle 4\. "Kant, Sade and the Libertine Enlightenment" by Alan Corkhill 5\. "Philosophical Liberty, Sexual Licence: The Ambiguity of Voltaire's Libertinage" by Serge Rivière Part II. Improper Women 6\. "The Female Rake: Gender, Libertinism and Enlightenment" by Kathleen Wilson 7\.
"Mozart: Die Entführung aus dem Serail K. 384 " by Georg Predota, interlude.hk, 16 July 2018 Certain aspects of the opera conform to an eighteenth-century European view of orientalism. The Pasha's titular harem, for example, reprised themes of sexual libertinage. And the comically sinister overseer, Osmin, is a send-up of earlier stereotypes of Turkish despotism.
Kerviler, René, François de La Mothe Le Vayer, précepteur du duc d'Anjou et de Louis XIV, étude sur sa vie et sur ses écrits, Paris, Rouveyre,1879, p.23; Pintard, René, Le libertinage érudit dans la première moitié du XVIIe siècle, Genève, Slatkine, 2000 [1943], p.135 His collected works in Latin and French appeared at Paris in 1644, with a life and eulogistic notice by Gabriel Naudé. The volume contains an engraved portrait of the author by Picart, in his official robes.
Lucia Demetrius, "Memorii" , in România Literară, Nr. 4/2004 Together with Luki, Gherea himself wrote the novel Nevinovățiile viclene ("The Cunning Naïvetés"). A study in adolescent psychology, which has earned posthumous appreciation, Ioana Pârvulescu, "În numele fiului", in România Literară, Nr. 10/2001 it appeared in Viața Românească in 1920. The work shocked conservative sensibilities with its supposed libertinage, and was only taken up by the literary magazine following Zarifopol's intercession. With Luki dying the next year, Gherea never returned to fiction writing.
At this time, they had their first encounter with the idle Italian Prince Dado Ruspoli, who belonged to the international playboy elite of the 1950s and whose discourse on sex had a profound impact on Marayat and Louis-Jacques. They immediately made Dado their "spiritual guide" and "high priest of love". In 1963, Louis- Jacques was posted to Italy, and for five years, the couple resided in both Venice and Rome, where they again met Ruspoli. He introduced them to the high society of transalpine libertinage.
Despite it having been written after de Sade's Les 120 journées de Sodome ou l'école du libertinage and Justine, the collection features little of the graphic display, elaborate torture and overall sadism that typically characterize de Sade's writing. The stories range from simple anecdotical tales with plot twists to clever softcore comedy and even some fantastic literature. Nevertheless, de Sade's trademark disdain for religion, morality and the French government remains, as does his sexually-themed narrative and devotion to nature as an excuse for the ways of the libertine.
Though raised in modest surroundings, Adams felt pressured to live up to his heritage. His was a family of Puritans, who profoundly affected their region's culture, laws, and traditions. By the time of John Adams's birth, Puritan tenets such as predestination had waned and many of their severe practices moderated, but Adams still "considered them bearers of freedom, a cause that still had a holy urgency." Adams recalled that his parents "held every Species of Libertinage in ... Contempt and horror," and detailed "pictures of disgrace, or baseness and of Ruin" resulting from any debauchery.
Following her adventures in Finland, Rachael returned to Austria to begin work on Pentagram Studio. The one hundred and thirty square meter subterranean space was officially established in January 2020, in the heart of Vienna's 5th District. Serving as both a showroom and a creative space, the studio is furnished with many of Rachael's own artworks including paintings, customised furniture and handmade glass mirror mosaics. The studio aims to encourage fellow like-minded artists to explore and push their outer limits within the realms of original art, libertinage, the occult, fetishism and horror.
The women should have their morals be corrected by work and piety. The police had full power to repress indiscriminately debauchery, prostitution and adultery, but in 1708 and 1713 (Ordinance of July 26, 1713 on "women debauchery" which enshrines the offence of prostitution), the conditions of repression are somewhat formalised (Louis XIV was in the end influenced by devout influences and ended his life of libertinage). Whistle-blowers have sign their denunciation, and a distinction is made between public debauchery (punished by fine or injunction to leave the premises) and acts of prostitution (banishment or imprisonment). This distinction however, has little effect.
There remains some controversy as to the extent to which Gassendi subscribed to the so-called libertinage érudit, the learned free-thinking that characterised the Tétrade, the Parisian circle to which he belonged, along with Gabriel Naudé and two others (Élie Diodati and François de La Mothe Le Vayer). Gassendi, at least, belonged to the fideist wing of the sceptics, arguing that the absence of certain knowledge implied the room for faith.Amesbury, Richard Fideism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 26 September 2012 In his dispute with Descartes he did apparently hold that the evidence of the senses remains the only convincing evidence; yet he maintains, as is natural from his mathematical training, that the evidence of reason is absolutely satisfactory.
The 120 Days of Sodom, or the School of LibertinageAlternatively The School of Licentiousness (Les 120 Journées de Sodome ou l'école du libertinage) is a novel by the French writer and nobleman Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade. Described as both pornographic and erotic, it was written in 1785. It tells the story of four wealthy male libertines who resolve to experience the ultimate sexual gratification in orgies. To do this, they seal themselves away for four months in an inaccessible castle in the heart of the Black Forest, with a harem of 36 victims, mostly male and female teenagers, and engage four female brothel keepers to tell the stories of their lives and adventures.
La famille du Duc de Penthièvre, ou La tasse de chocolat, painting by Jean-Baptiste Charpentier le Vieux (1768). From left to right, seated: Duc de Penthièvre; prince de Lamballe; Princesse de Lamballe, Comtesse de Toulouse; standing in background: Mlle de Penthièvre. During the first few months of their marriage, the couple appeared devoted to each other, but the duke went back to the life of libertinage he had led before his marriage. In the summer of 1772, a few months after his wife had given birth to a stillborn daughter, Philippe's secret liaison began with one of her ladies-in-waiting, Stéphanie Félicité Ducrest de St-Albin, Comtesse de Genlis, the niece of Madame de Montesson, the morganatic wife of Philippe's father.
In Un río, un amor, "Destierro" echoes Reverdy's poetry in its evocation of a solitary existence in a hostile urban world.Harris notes to Un río etc p 55 He also read Lautréamont's Les Chants de Maldoror and Préface a un livre futur, although their influence emerged at a later time when Cernuda began to explore the French Surrealist movement. Just before he completed Perfil del aire, in March 1926, the Madrid book-seller León Sánchez Cuesta had already delivered to him a copy of Le Libertinage by Louis Aragon. In the time just after the publication of Perfil del aire, he began to read other books by the leaders of the Surrealist movement - André Breton, Paul Eluard, Louis Aragon and René Crevel.
Poem by Vasalis on a wall in The Hague 1940 - Onweer, in Drie Novellen, met J. Campert en E. Eewijck 1940 - Parken en woestijnen 1945 - Fragmenten uit een journaal, in Criterium 1947 - De vogel Phoenix 1952 - Naar aanleiding van Atonaal, in Libertinage 1954 - Vergezichten en gezichten, een bloemlezing van verzen 1958 - Kunstenaar en verzet 1960 - De dichter en de zee, bloemlezing 1964 - (S)teken aan de wand, in Raam, toespraak 1977 - Dankwoord bij de uitreiking van de C. Huygensprijs 1974, in Literama 1982 - Het ezeltje, facsimile 1983 - Pijn, waarvoor geen naam bestaat, juryrapport over enkele gedichten van de Nederlandse auteur Bunnik 1984 - Dankwoord bij de aanvaarding van de P.C. Hooftprijs 1982 2002 - De oude kustlijn, posthumously published by her children. 2009 - De amanuensis 2009 - Briefwisseling 1951-1987 / M. Vasalis, Geert van Oorschot. Uitgeverij G.A. van Oorschot, Amsterdam, 2009 2011 - Vriendenbrieven. Exchange in letters between Kiek Drooglever Fortuyn-Leenmans en Harro & Carina Bouman- Hofstede Crull.

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