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18 Sentences With "poeticized"

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

His academic realism was giving way to a poeticized vision.
Something like math poeticized, or poetry mathematized, at novel size the book would've gone down way too rich.
But he attained his stature through a reverse logic, in which the poeticized lens reveals hard facts, while everyday realties show themselves to be chimeras.
Monarchs coming to power in the centuries preceding mass media could be mythologized and poeticized because myths and poems were the chief cultural material around.
He poeticized the stern predilections of the Counter-Reformation, which sparked both glories in art and terrors in life—in particular, the Inquisition, which especially targeted "crypto" remnants of the Jewish population that had been expelled from Spain in 21640.
The main imagery of weaving songs is the weaving process, the weaver, the loom, the delicate linens. Since the girls were usually weaving linens to fill their wedding trousseaux, the weaving process was highly poeticized.
In the scenes of A.Mehdiyev, the work, labor and rest of ordinary people were poeticized. In 1987 the artist created the "1937" painting. Agha Mehdiyev was the first painter among Azerbaijani artists, created work about repression. The artist was a member of the Artists' Union of the USSR since 1994.
Title page of the 1703 edition Plorantis Croatiae saecula duo (English: "Two centuries of Croatia in mourning") is a poetical work by Pavao Ritter Vitezović, published in 1703 in Zagreb. As with many of Vitezović's works, it is written in Latin. The unusual structure of the work makes it difficult to classify, being variously described as a poeticized chronicle,Whose Love of Which Country?, Sandor Bene, pp.
Raffaele Milani writes that in the essay, "...the idea of Beauty unifies all others in a fusion of the self and nature."Raffaele Milani, Art of the Landscape, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2009, p. 112. Dieter Henrich called the document a "program for agitation." It called for a new mythology to mediate between the present state and the future envisioned poeticized state, in which poetry will function for the arts and sciences, including philosophy.
The novel, upon its release, received mixed response. At the time of the sharp division in the Russian cultural elite, critics came to assume the novel each according to their own current political stand. The Russian Messenger, a conservative magazine, not just praised the way Goncharov allegedly "poeticized the old times" but saw this as the novel's major asset. Critics close to the democratic camp (among them Nikolai Shelgunov and Maria Tsebrikova) published negative reviews.
He, along with his fellow commedia masks,Both masked and unmasked characters of the commedia were known as "masks": see Andrews, p. xix. was beginning to be "poeticized" in the early 1700s: he was being made the subject, not only of poignant folksong ("Au clair de la lune", sometimes attributed to Lully)," ... without the least proof": Fournier, p. 114. but also of the more ambitious art of Claude Gillot (Master André's Tomb [c. 1717]), of Gillot's students Watteau (Italian Actors [c.
Jurgis Kunčinas (13 January 1947 in Alytus, Lithuania - 13 December 2002) was a poet, novelist, translator and essayist. He has been described as the chronicler of Soviet bohemianism, who poeticized the individual's internal autonomy as an alternative to the absurdity of social life. His works, originally published in the Lithuanian language, have been translated into English, German, Russian, Estonian, Belarusian, Swedish, and Polish. Kunčinas received the Lithuanian Writers Union' prize in 1994 for the novel Tūla, set largely in Vilnius's Užupis district.
Later, Rosemary Ashton claims that the poem "is little more than poeticized opinion, a blank verse, iambic pentameter runthrough of ideas familiar from his lectures and letters [...] Musings' is hardly an appropriate description of the sustained tone of righteous horror in the poem." Richard Cronin argues that "the poem, as it subtitle acknowledges, signally fails to embody in itself the kind of whole that it celebrates. It remains a fragmentary poem that lauds the process by which fragments collapse into unity."Cronin 2000, p. 21.
He also wrote stories and poeticized reports for the newspaper Jedinstvo. He published his first works in Jedinstvo and the magazines Stremljenja, Omladini, Mladosti, Susretima, Jeta e re, Rilindja, Odjek. Vučković drowned in Lake Ohrid together with the Montenegrin poet Blažo Šćepanović, at a time when they were participating in the Struga Poetry Evenings, in the summer of 1966. Another Serbian poet, Oskar Davičo, who was with them also fell in the water when the boat capsized but survived because he knew how to swim; unfortunately, Vučković and Šćepanović did not.
There he found employment in various cities as both a designer and painter. A landscape dated 1748 reveals rustic themes he was to repeat often: sun bathed shepherds leading their goats and sheep to a cascading stream, a water mill, rocky elevations covered in lush vegetation, and the poeticized relics of an ancient bridge. In 1750, at the age of 22, he moved to Lisbon, where he enjoyed continuing success. The lure of travel compelled him to decline an offer to become First Painter to King Joseph of Portugal, and in 1754 he left Lisbon for London.
From the mid-20th century, the great Arab exponent of prose poetry was the Syrian poet Adunis (Ali Ahmad Said Esber, born 1930), a perennial contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature.Robyn Creswell, "Hearing Voices: How the doyen of Arabic poetry draws on—and explodes—its traditions", The New Yorker, 18 & 25 December 2017, pp. 106–9. The Modernist poet T. S. Eliot wrote vehemently against prose poems. He added to the debate about what defines the genre, writing in his introduction to Djuna Barnes' highly poeticized 1936 novel Nightwood that it could not be classed as "poetic prose" as it did not show the rhythm or "musical pattern" of verse.
Due to their prevalence in the published book as well as the more explicit portions of the book excised before publication, many scholars have put forth views on why sex and sexuality play such a significant role in the novel. Some ascribe the explorations as merely a poeticized documentation of the various character types he witnessed during his time in New Orleans' bohemian community, a "site of flamboyant sexual masquerade and activity of all sorts."Gwin, 124. Scholars like Minrose Gwin, however, believe that this exploration had a deeper connection to Faulkner's personal experiences, arguing that he wished to bring to question the culturally compulsory heterosexual normsGwin, 122.
Ogier the Dane's first appearance (spelled Oger) in any work is in Chanson de Roland (c. 1060), where he is not named as one of the douzepers (twelve peers or paladins) of Charlemagne, although he is usually one of the twelve peers in other works. In the poeticized Battle of Roncevaux Pass, Ogier is assigned to be the vanguard and commands the Bavarian Army in the battle against Baligant in the later half. He plays only a minor part in this poem, and it is unclear what becomes of him, but the Pseudo-Turpin knows of a tradition that Ogier was killed at Roncevaux. A full career of Ogier from youth to death is treated in La Chevalerie Ogier de Danemarche, a 13th-century assonanced poem of approximately 13,000 lines attributed to Raimbert de Paris.

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