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"romanticize" Definitions
  1. romanticize (something) to make something seem more attractive or interesting than it really is

249 Sentences With "romanticize"

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

From that experience, I just ... People romanticize being disconnected, and I find it impossible to romanticize being disconnected, because I've actually experienced it for long stretches of time.
It's hard to romanticize and sexualize a woman committing filicide.
In my head, I used to romanticize having sex outside.
And I don't romanticize the grind, but it's just there.
It would be easy for "Orange" to romanticize its inmates.
I don't want to romanticize President Barack Obama's immigration legacy.
Nora would prefer not to romanticize any of these outcomes.
" But she added, "We're not trying to romanticize that life.
"Thomas definitely likes to romanticize, and that's wonderful," he said.
"It's hard to romanticize a bad material thing," Gilovich says.
Smith thinks many founders romanticize struggles that they never really experienced.
"Far too many Americans romanticize their family story," Reese told me.
"People romanticize paring their lives down," he said, stroking his chin.
I don't want to romanticize it, but it was pretty beautiful.
A lot of people romanticize it about him and the park.
Conservatives respect our police and military, while liberals romanticize street thugs.
"You can romanticize elements of his character, but if you romanticize his entire outlook on life, then that might be an issue," the actress told Refinery29 in a phone interview for her makeup collaboration with Buxom.
He doesn't romanticize violence itself as a vital cleansing agent of society.
"People say we romanticize the slave and slave owner relationship," she explains.
So are some people who romanticize a world of unlimited racial choices.
Loomis refuses to romanticize this period or the labor movement it produced.
I do not wish to romanticize the possibilities under President-elect Trump.
This tendency to romanticize what it means to be American persists today.
" Instead, these memorials romanticize both Robert E. Lee and the "Lost Cause.
Few genres romanticize rags-to-riches stories the way country music does.
"You know, people romanticize the moon," Mr. Bean wrote in his book.
That it didn't make sense to stubbornly romanticize a single past version.
"Perhaps it reminds people of something their parents' had, so they romanticize it."
I feel like now, I'm able to romanticize parts of my own life.
I try very hard not to over-romanticize this part of my life.
It goes back to the idea of what it means to romanticize something.
We still romanticize the family farm, though relatively few of them exist anymore.
There is also a very pragmatic reason not to over-romanticize the past.
Jackson refuses to romanticize Himes's life or his motivation for becoming an artist.
"The notion was to de-romanticize small-scale organic farming," Mr. Gieser said.
The past, particularly childhood, is easy to romanticize because it always seems simpler.
We shouldn't over-romanticize certain things because we can limit ourselves that way.
There are also similarities in the ways we romanticize both travel and dating.
However, these exclusions romanticize the messy life choices of our greatest creative minds.
It's easy to romanticize Old Hollywood as an era filled with glamour and grace.
That's why I dislike films like Harry Potter, which tend to romanticize such places.
If we romanticize the bare minimum, we remove the pressure to demand such justice.
Cereals are deeply intertwined with our memories of childhood, which we tend to romanticize.
Now I romanticize the whole thing, because I'm on the other side of it.
"I like to romanticize businesses, and I fall in love with them," Lemonis said.
To love Snape is not necessarily to excuse the inexcusable, or romanticize his abusiveness.
However, the atmosphere is misty as Mercury clashes with Neptune—don't romanticize the past.
I had to acknowledge the fact that I romanticize too much of the past.
When you disappear, people tend to romanticize who you are and what you can do.
" Despite their distance, "It all felt like that kind of young love we romanticize about.
Flicks like Drumline and School Daze romanticize the history and bureaucracies of those schools, too.
People like to romanticize things, but were the majority of people buying the actual magazine?
I'm against them because they romanticize something that happens in real life far too often.
What I find off-putting about them is that they tend to romanticize the past.
I don't want to romanticize it too much because I think there were drawbacks too.
Both Adams and Sellars are California residents, but neither is inclined to romanticize the state.
To this casual viewer's eye, no undue attempt is made to romanticize the Irish nationalists.
To lay blame for congressional gridlock at Buckley is to ignore – or incorrectly romanticize – history.
In their wake, we are left to romanticize the potential of what could have been.
The industry knows best how to romanticize itself and often rewards the films that do.
For Americans, Cuba can feel like a mysterious, secretive place—people romanticize it like crazy.
Researchers chose well when they selected students, young hip people who romanticize the allure of print.
There are moments when this unconventional approach to aging feels freeing, and I can romanticize it.
I would never, there's some artists who I think romanticize a certain era of their life.
Mr. Smith doesn't romanticize mental illness or sentimentalize intellectual impairment, and he isn't telling war stories.
Too many times in any career, we romanticize it and all the great things about it.
The author continues to bring England's Regency period to life (and romanticize it) to her countless fans.
We are not surprised when gallerists romanticize, minimize, and hide sexually abusive behavior by artists they represent.
It was a little like a West Side Story thing, without wanting to romanticize it too much.
In fact, they go out of their way to romanticize both women and relationships at every opportunity.
To romanticize drug abuse can be as straightforward as applying traditional moviemaking narrative structures to the topic.
She doesn't romanticize the war; some of the Blitz scenes in "Life After Life" are harrowingly gory.
Thompson backtracks a bit at the end, but his cynical message is clear: Don't romanticize traditional journalism.
"I grew up in the '2276s in the South Bronx and you can't romanticize it," he said.
Don't romanticize the swan dive's connotation; no matter the height you dive from, you'll never feel birdlike.
I don't want to generalize or over-romanticize the artist, but we do have to have some flexibility.
While Manifesto is a love letter of sorts to the artists themselves, the film doesn't explicitly romanticize them.
Though we purport to value artists and romanticize their muses, the aforementioned activities aren't often recognized as work.
But this is a type of landscape many people are familiar with, even in easy-to-romanticize New Mexico.
It just seems funny to me when younger people romanticize their breakups when there wasn't much on the line.
Obviously, people have a reason to be skeptical: the film has the disturbing potential to romanticize Nazis and Nazism.
Try not to romanticize the past too much, little fish; enjoy the walk down memory lane you'll surely take.
" Ann Magnuson, the actress and 1980s party promoter, sensibly says near the book's end, "Don't romanticize having no money!
The show talks a lot about nostalgia, and you interview a lot of people who romanticize about the past.
And for the Africans who live in this part of the world, what we romanticize is simply their home.
Despite a tendency of visitors to romanticize island life, year-round residents reject any suggestion that it is simple.
It manages to romanticize stalking, while simultaneously creating empathy for the perpetrator Goldberg and frustration with the victim, Beck.
"We wanted to de-romanticize the notion of solidarity, and bring it down to reality on the ground," says Khalili.
Its powerful storytelling may lead impressionable viewers to romanticize the choices made by the characters and/or develop revenge fantasies.
Does the past hold too much sway for all of us, or just those who romanticize a rugged cruel occupation?
Sometimes people assume that goths romanticize death, but at least, in my case, I'm completely and utterly horrified by death.
Small, scrappy citizen groups, as much as we may romanticize them, simply aren't equipped to win battles at this scale.
"People tend to romanticize the past and say, 'Oh, the seats were more comfortable and they were bigger,'" he said.
But Jobs "had a whole argument that you have to take a generic name and romanticize it," Wolfram told CNBC.
It makes sense that millennials, the most recorded generation in history, would romanticize the era just before smartphones became ubiquitous.
They also romanticize how things ended, and often re-tell the story with an emphasis on doomed love, Greenberg says.
Rock history loves to romanticize the bands that couldn't keep it together, often just as they were hitting their stride.
You use morose or dire language to make a point, and don't often romanticize a situation when you're discussing it.
Look for the positive aspects of your new surroundings, and try not to romanticize the home you are leaving behind.
We need to be careful not to romanticize the history of mending, a craft that has grown out of necessity.
There's nothing wrong with appreciating what Eli did on a big stage, but let's not romanticize the total body of work.
While we may feel a strong emotional pull toward situations, there is also a tendency to romanticize or even delude ourselves.
And as much as we'd like to romanticize this seasonally nostalgic activity, the truth is, it's a pain in the ass.
Ms. Lake tends to romanticize Cashin's years with Coach as a love fest with the company's owners, Lillian and Miles Cahn.
ISIS and al-Qaeda, likewise, fantasize of sparking sectarian civil wars and romanticize of glorious medieval mythologies that never actually existed.
Employees at once-great but now-struggling companies have a tendency to romanticize a company's early days and resist necessary changes.
I don't want to over-romanticize anything but I felt a moment of connection with the restaurant and it was really beautiful.
I know better than to romanticize the city's more dangerous eras and, believe me, I appreciate not feeling nervous on the subway.
There's a drive within most of us to romanticize the rural, to imbue the pastoral with an underserved and ultimately damaging sentimentality.
"We don't romanticize baseball as much as people would love us to," Morton said as he stood inside the clubhouse this month.
"They romanticize their workplaces and treat their black characters as the ideal crowbar for closed white minds and insulated lives," he writes.
You can't just romanticize the margins, or you can't just think about the center as the enemy, because there is no center.
Norman Mailer's book is character study, an obsessive attempt to complicate and make sense of Utah killer Gary Gilmore, even romanticize him.
In particular, she has been contemplating what it means to romanticize or find arousal in traumatic events, whether personal, historical or both.
Now, we romanticize our cable-assisted, internet-borne so-called golden age and carp about the galactic girth of the streaming era.
While Hypnospace Outlaw doesn't overly romanticize the past, it demonstrates the ways that communities can grow in spite of their creators' mistakes.
Since we tend to romanticize the cereals we grew up with, debating which one is the best can be a rather contentious affair.
We romanticize the founders of these companies because we recognize that on some level, technology has, more or less, made our lives better.
And Mark is sweet, but the movie doesn't completely romanticize him, or elide the ways his doll project awkwardly depicts his sexual interests.
Written in direct, workmanlike language, their books don't romanticize animal behavior, even as they focus on those aspects that tug at human hearts.
It's the architecture, it's the energy, it's the people, it's the city of light and you can't help but romanticize your experiences there.
To say that Donald Trump is not acting presidential is not to romanticize what we have seen from previous inhabitants of the office.
It's silly to romanticize the mundane; there's nothing magic about a sunset, and the tilt of a planetary axis is no real enchantment.
And there was also mixed reception of the Five Feet Apart trailer—people were worried it might romanticize chronic illness, like other YA films.
The outliers are conservative elites who profess to oppose Trump's candidacy, but who nevertheless celebrate or romanticize triumphant Trumpian forces in the United Kingdom.
But as we kick off the centennial year of women winning the right to vote, we mustn't romanticize the story of the 19th Amendment.
Although South Koreans may not like the military draft in reality, they romanticize the army culturally, gobbling up pictures of their idols in uniform.
It's not giant screens, or booming sound, or "the communal experience of a darkened movie theater," all things that movie people love to romanticize.
Coal jobs carry far more symbolic and therefore political heft, however, since no one has yet figured out how to romanticize solar-panel installation.
Harrington doesn't romanticize the world of mental illness before drugs — drugs that many patients credit with offering relief and even a chance at survival.
I romanticize glass because plastic is such a scourge these days, but then I remember all the glass bottles I've dropped in my life.
In books like "After a Funeral" (1986) and "Make Believe" (1993), she refused to romanticize madness, sex, revolutionary politics or even her own motives.
Millennials came of age during gloomy economic times defined by low interest rates and high unemployment, so there is no past for them to romanticize.
If anything, it makes it easy to romanticize them or paint their inhabitants as brilliant masterminds, fueling their sense of self-importance and persecution complex.
We romanticize the classical notion that destruction leads to creation, and never is it more appealing than when what's being destroyed is "just" female dignity.
We can romanticize those jobs, but if you had a better option, something that's a little gentler on the body, people might choose the latter.
I try my best not to romanticize it, but rather to describe it as a process that often involves a lot of people working together.
We romanticize adolescence because it's so malleable: a burst of change, physical and mental, that feels abysmal as it happens and irreplaceable once it's over.
Standing in 1935, no one knows what's coming down the pike from Africa in the violence and oppression that you can't romanticize or essentialize Africa.
Mexican-British photographer Monica Alcazar-Duarte sees this color manipulation as emblematic of the way we romanticize what life would be like on the red planet.
It was this strange little ecosystem and hierarchy that I romanticize a lot, but it also had the high school dynamics that would happen anywhere else.
But nostalgia, laced with I-should-have-bought-a-ticket regret have combined to over-romanticize the experience as a playground for the rich and famous.
We romanticize depth and role-players, and convince ourselves that the fourth-line plug is just as important as the superstar in his own gritty way.
When a lot of the mainstream media talks about the working class, there is a tendency to romanticize, to idealize them as the most authentic Americans.
Those of us who usually encounter fish under beurre blanc and capers might romanticize these scenes of interspecies encounter — performed, of course, by people of color.
But lest we overly romanticize the old seniority-based committee, remember that that system rewarded members who were in super-safe seats and could accumulate seniority.
The community holds up the victims of the mass shooting as heroes and Hughes told the crowd he was concerned that would "unintentionally romanticize" the suicide deaths.
"You can romanticize it — and maybe it is adding something — but it also just means that I'm not getting paid, and I'm in my 50s," she jokes.
I think it's dangerous to romanticize pooping in the open as India becomes more populated, and people move closer to open gutters and streams in rural areas.
In decrying contemporary hyperpartisanship, we must not over-romanticize the old interest-group politics, in which party leaders worked out bargains among competing interests behind closed doors.
No one, other than the immediate family, needs or has a right to this information, which only helps to romanticize the deceased and the cause of death.
No matter how I romanticize single or partnered life, whatever happens for me is going to have to be okay — because this is the only life I've got.
I am well aware of the unoriginality of this lament, especially given how common it is in certain circles now to romanticize the city's grittier, graffiti-covered past.
They romanticize and idealize the killers, Dylan Klebold, 17, and Eric Harris, 18, on websites like Tumblr, where they post memes, videos or fan art of the shooters.
"There is no burning desire for me to even, like, romanticize about going back to that place, because I know I am powerless over my addiction," Champ said.
"I like that the character is a really strong character and tough — she's not someone you're worried about at all, and it doesn't romanticize her blindness," she said.
The streets romanticize being the plug—and I definitely saw and still see the glamour in it—but that doesn't mean shit if you don't have your sanity.
Although many well-fed Westerners romanticize small-scale farming in developing countries, in reality the conditions faced by subsistence farmers in Africa and South Asia are extremely harsh.
"Obviously, one can romanticize it all, but I think Penny Chenery had a sense that connected her to the horse," Mr. Wallace said when the movie was released.
They'll romanticize your relationship until the end of time, but you can likely still be friends or maybe even hook up with each other again down the line.
And this style of living is generally celebrated by politicians of both parties, who romanticize holding down two jobs or working long hours as some uniquely American virtue.
"I wanted to romanticize that time when you'd come home from middle school and go directly onto one of those online messengers to talk to your friends," he said.
My parents' generation romanticize the pop and hiss of vinyl, but for me, it's not the defects in the recording, but the clatter and clicks of CDs and cases.
On the other, fossil fuel stalwarts -- typically described as conservatives -- display a knee-jerk rejection of clean energy in favor of the insistence that we all romanticize black lung.
"Harrington doesn't romanticize the world of mental illness before drugs — drugs that many patients credit with offering relief and even a chance at survival," our critic Jennifer Szalai writes.
Pinterest and The Knot Worldwide, widely known as major wedding planning websites, will no longer promote wedding venues and content that romanticize former slave plantations, according to BuzzFeed News.
But the songs don't romanticize junkies and drunks, the way so many artists have done, but instead examine the demoralization, bravery, and downright humiliation that come with battling addiction.
For the most part, it manages to delicately balance the tendency to romanticize the period with recognizing the toll that being under siege takes on people, both collectively and individually.
Hammond represents a commerce viewpoint and answers "yes" to the question, because there is money to be made and because entrepreneurs often romanticize their ventures, failing to see potential shortcomings.
Although many romanticize small businesses' role in the economy, showering attention on them distracts us from adopting policies that will actually boost growth and raise living standards for American workers.
But you gotta remember that Detroit is responsible for techno, and Chicago and NYC pioneered house, so your Second Summer of Love isn't something we romanticize too much over here.
Rather than romanticize Hathaway's fate, the play demands that we see him as both marvelous and morally complicated, a man who had to fight himself in order to be heard.
The movie doesn't romanticize or judge them, but it also shies away from the kind of objective naturalism that would challenge viewers to think about what this story might mean.
The ideological charge leveled for decades at this strain of filmmaking is that such eye-catching tableaus romanticize poverty, but prettified squalor has become sadly familiar in global documentary filmmaking.
Then it began to romanticize the outlaws — literally, people who cheat — in a so-called "Wild West" that actually wasn't that violent (except when it came to violence against Native Americans).
We tend to romanticize the things that we're exposed to in our youth, and for me, my discovery of music and the strange things it does to you, started with CDs.
It's not difficult to romanticize women on the sea — easier still when the image's qualities (leisure, the tropics as an exotic space, whiteness) are no longer unquestionably associated with its location.
In starting his blog and taking EDC mainstream, Capulong inadvertently tapped into the fact that all these seemingly disparate demographics were desperate to connect over the desire to romanticize rugged survivalism.
The lack of accountability could also enable a younger generation of Brazilians to romanticize what a new military intervention could bring, said Pedro Dallari, a jurist who oversaw the truth commission.
And while it jumps around the boroughs without slightest concern for the laws of physics, Kal Ho Naa Ho undoubtedly belongs in the pantheon of movies which romanticize New York City.
Maybe because we live in an age of so many choices, most of them meaningless, we romanticize the notion that falling in love isn't a choice but something that happens to us.
Julian Zelizer: Obama's stern warning for Trump January 13 To say that Donald Trump is not acting presidential is not to romanticize what we have seen from previous inhabitants of the office.
Bonney was the most Rimbaldian of contemporary poets, truly living the limit-experiences — in drink, drugs, and psychological and economic extremity — that most middle-class denizens of the poetry world only romanticize.
Amid a national reckoning with sexual harassment and misconduct, Broadway is mounting a cluster of musicals this season and next that, some theatergoers already contend, romanticize problematic relationships between women and men.
It is so easy to romanticize figures like Cavendish and their firsts; to know that the gorgeous romance of Dutton's language describes a true woman makes the book all the more exciting.
Bernie SandersBernie SandersThe Hill's Morning Report - Trump takes unexpected step to stem coronavirus Democrats start hinting Sanders should drop out Coronavirus disrupts presidential campaigns MORE (I-Vt.), who romanticize Latin American revolutionaries.
Although not a Confederate veteran himself, Griffith's The Birth of a Nation did more than any other production to romanticize the rebel cause and the Ku Klux Klan that emerged from it.
Faced with mild backlash after the film's premiere at Sundance and the subsequent trailer release, Efron has been adamant that the point of the film is not to glorify or romanticize the killer.
Whether you romanticize past relationships (even the really unhealthy ones), or you predict catastrophic outcomes for the future (like becoming the lonely cat lady who children fear), don't indulge in your negative thoughts.
To make a movie about drugs almost guarantees that you romanticize them, because otherwise there would be no narrative at all—just long nights, empty bank accounts, and a feeling like cold hunger.
They might tell people, "We were so perfect together, and I pictured us getting married and named our babies," to romanticize how things actually ended — which in reality could have been really messy.
But I've always admired that in a culture and medium that often romanticize both violence and suffering, Dog Days refuses to offer even a hope that they serve some kind of redemptive purpose.
Who are we to judge the American veterans of the Vietnam War and their local allies whom they came to consider friends or brothers, either to romanticize or victimize, valorize or demonize them?
The persistent trope of the "tortured artist" argues yes — and although use of that term tends to romanticize serious mental health issues, there's been much research into the relationship between creative output and anguish.
In that context, it would be wrong to romanticize those few minutes, to shrug off a few smashed windows as a price worth paying for a decent bit of noise at a soccer game.
Joe Berlinger, the Oscar-nominated director whose upcoming film Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile, about the life of Ted Bundy, says moviegoers can be assured the movie won't romanticize the notorious serial killer.
Maybe these people are stuck in that era and they romanticize that era and they're willing to step out of that shell for a minute to use digital technology; maybe that's what we're seeing.
CreditCreditErik Tanner for The New York Times You could romanticize it as a balcony, but really it's an ornate fire escape, painted creamy beige and stretched across the facade of the Walter Kerr Theater.
In December, the news that wedding planning websites would stop promoting vendors that romanticize former slave plantations led to some backlash, which alarmed many in Charleston, where tourism and weddings go hand in hand.
I also don't romanticize agrarian life — there's too much manure around for it to be truly idyllic — but meaningful work for kids is less about any particular task than the habits the hours teach.
We should not romanticize the moment in the spotlight that Osaka and Gauff shared or hold them to unreasonable expectations about how they should regard each other (and their fellow players) from now on.
It's easy to romanticize the past—fuck, I remember I used to sell tens of thousands of records and shit like that, but the reality back then was that I didn't see a goddamn dime.
In other words, the collection doesn't seem to romanticize the provenance of artworks or their unattainability, but offers insights into the beginnings of art practices and artists who gave shape to today's contemporary art landscape.
Nowadays, we like to romanticize running as a solo sport, each of us slapping along to the heroic echo of our solitary footsteps, but our ancestors knew that in nature, a solitary runner is doomed.
The content is very repetitive (we get it Roy, you romanticize a time when only white men mattered), and it doesn't offer any sort of insight or revelation in the way it thinks it does.
Walter Prime serves as an extended metaphor for our own memories, and how once loved ones are gone, we may conveniently choose to forget the less-savory aspects of their personalities, or otherwise romanticize the past.
The mythology of Columbine Ralph Larkin, the author of the 2007 book "Comprehending Columbine," said most of these Columbiners are young teenage girls who romanticize and deify the shooters, partly because they relate to the shooters.
She writes beautiful stylized prose from the first-person view of her characters ("I've worked too damn hard for too long to give up my throne," Cora says), but Liz says her book doesn't romanticize prostitution.
After including so many details that seem to unduly romanticize Bundy's relationship, capture, escape, and indictment, the film does little to provide emotional counterbalance to remind us: This man raped, tortured, and murdered dozens of women.
Unlike other films about the space program, "First Man" doesn't romanticize mankind's ascent to the heavens, and it doesn't give the famously reticent Neil Armstrong (Ryan Gosling) some hidden depth that had never been accessed before.
The implications of his cavalier attitude about drug use could be far-reaching and potentially damaging, and he should take his fans into consideration when discussing these issues, as well as send messages that don't romanticize addiction.
And when I met Nic, I felt like all of the keys presented themselves because I didn't have to cross some huge bridge and be in pain or romanticize how I'm going to play a drug addict.
I think that image really straddles the documentarian approach and also the artistic sensitivity and the mood and our intention to not glamorize or romanticize but point out what is quite beautiful and delicate about this place.
All these images support the ongoing propaganda used to condone Jim Crow laws and romanticize the Confederacy, so Adams adds subtle red markings, usually over figures' eyes, to denote her own protest against their supposed historic validity.
Perhaps it was an understandable caution of avoiding toxic stereotypes (given the dearth of thoughtful queer representation on TV), or a reluctance to romanticize a murderer, that steered the show's writing toward a safe and respectable route.
Fans have posted about their discomfort with their conflicting feelings on social media, and Badgley himself has weighed in: His insistence that fans should not romanticize his character is noble, but much of his audience remains unconvinced.
It has become commonplace for New Yorkers to romanticize a past city that they encounter in any number of retrospectives, like Bianchi's monograph or Patti Smith's memoir of her life with Robert Mapplethorpe in the Chelsea Hotel.
But I have a message for these Republicans: The party you romanticize in your heads, the one that exists in exile waiting to one day make its valorous return, is gone, gobbled up by the beastly base.
Every episode I've seen (there are nearly 2,000) is a thrilling cultural artifact, a tiny parable about the way we romanticize the stresses of modern American life and pile on more in hopes of assuaging those festering below.
It would be wrong to romanticize them too much, but it's safe to say that unlike older generations, they are dead-set against standing onstage and opening their mouths in some vain hope of winning modest social benefits.
Pinterest and the Knot Worldwide, two of the country's biggest online wedding-planning platforms, are changing their policies to stop promoting wedding venues and content that romanticize former slave plantations, representatives for the companies exclusively told BuzzFeed News.
Now, as the nights draw in and people romanticize both the death of most outdoor plants and a hike in their energy bills, parts of the music industry are starting to account for the best music of the year.
Most of them were erected decades after the end of the Civil War as a result of a revisionist set of beliefs often referred to as the "Lost Cause" that aimed to romanticize the Confederacy and downplay the issue of slavery.
A lot of shows and movies that have tried to represent teenagers or the chaos that is coming at that age, they shy away from it, romanticize it or they kind of fantasize what it's like to be a teenager.
And Nick the guy who can't help participating in this horrific system is a lot more interesting, and a lot less easy to romanticize, than Nick the hero who is caught up in Gilead through no fault of his own.
Exacerbated by austerity, and assisted by an explosion of Facebook groups that spew hatred and romanticize the conflict, paramilitary activity has risen over the past year, whilst the number of murders linked to paramilitary involvement in 2016 more than doubled.
Marinel de Jesus, who quit her job as a lawyer to move to Peru and founded a global trekking company, believes that we should not over-romanticize solo travel and that there should be more data available about its inherent dangers.
But it's hard to imagine anyone romanticizing Camille and her darkness — certainly not the way some fans romanticize the darkness of her male TV drama counterparts, the Walter Whites and Rust Cohles and Tony Sopranos that have littered the cable and streaming landscape.
"I was fascinated by the rise of depression-related humor—a type of joking around that didn't romanticize mental illness, but rather drew people together and said 'look, you're not the only one' in this amusing but cathartic way," meme account administrator @lamotrigine.
"Barnaby Joyce's resignation shows us that no matter how much we might romanticize Australian politics — particularly rural politics — the numbers still matter at the end of the day," said Jill Sheppard, a lecturer at Australian National University's School of Politics and International Relations.
It is tempting to romanticize psychotic illness, so let me emphasize that the men and women with these mental disorders experience terrifying cognitive, social, and psychological disturbances that send gashes of devastation through their lives; I know this story as intimately as anyone.
Of course, we romanticize going to record stores and those kind of things, and it's kinda sad that they're gone, but I think you can still be exposed to it, and if you're a good parent [Laughs] you can teach your kids.
Although some of the songs on the band's forthcoming album, A Brief Inquiry Into Online Relationships, will reference drug use — including track "It's Not Living If It's Not with You," which Healy described as "the big heroin one" — it's not something Healy wants to romanticize.
Reflecting on some of the more over-the-top aspects of the celebration in the United States, such as the annual green-dying of the Chicago River, he said there is a tendency to romanticize homelands after millions of people move to another country.
The miracle of convenience allows us to romanticize this unilateralism to operate everything from our light bulbs, security systems, thermostats, music and media with a simple voice command — even as we disengage from people and depersonalize the institutions that enable real connection and collective agency.
" In his 2015 essay "Accident over N: Lines of Flight in the Philosophical Notebooks of Novalis," which can serve as an illuminating theoretical framework for The Absolute Letter, Joron says, "To romanticize — that is, to magic or to mimic the insurgencies of the Absolute — start anywhere.
Today the folklore we create around mobility doesn't even bother much with the fantasy because we romanticize the con itself: every origin story out of Silicon Valley with an already-privileged kid sitting on a sofa somewhere on the Stanford campus, tugging billions out of his hoodie strings.
Or whether it's the result — whether the development is the result of the way fashion media and the fashion industry has tended to fetishize and dollarize and romanticize and favor particular looks, to exclude lots and lots of body types and people from its pages, from its worldview.
Maybe we romanticize this bureaucratic healthcare work less because it is the unsung labor of women who get up early every morning to get their kids to school—and need a job where they can clock in and out at specific times every day and be home to cook dinner.
And I believe that most of us now, today, we've found a way to romanticize a very difficult thing, which is protest and this sense of freedom we've been trying to reach essentially since we created these guidelines that we know as love and race and sex and gender and sexuality.
"Is there a particular kind of abjection that some of us are drawn to, participate in, possibly romanticize?" she asks, while also wondering, touchingly — at this point as a single mother of two — "what deep security am I withholding from the children?" by insisting on living life on her own terms.
The revolution, and Hamilton's life are the narrative subject, but its purpose is not to romanticize real American history: rather, it is to reclaim the narrative of America for people of colour … If you're watching/listening to Hamilton and then going out and romanticizing the real founding fathers/American revolutionaries, you're missing the entire point.
Having a tempestuous relationships with professional critics, from the days of rolling my eyes at Rolling Stone's four star Mick Jagger reviews and criminal inattention to the Western Mass Hardcore scene all the way to being told (correctly) that I couldn't sing by Time Out New York, it's not a class I'm inclined to romanticize.
We tend to romanticize "the designers" and to bestow upon them some sort of mystical, spiritual connection to the houses where they reign, maybe because what they make touches our bodies and can thus transform our lives, maybe because it involves the alchemy of invention or because designers these days have the golden glow of celebrity.
Christmas past is no longer a time before industrialism or a time before World War II. It's a time when everybody was watching the same thing on TV. So when Hallmark Christmas movies explicitly romanticize Christmas past, they're romanticizing an era of popular entertainment that didn't question for a second that the leads of a romantic comedy would be white, straight, and cis.
When you're taking on an illness like cystic fibrosis, the nature of the film industry might be to romanticize it in a way that would do a disservice to the community...Justin, as a director and individual, has had so much experience with the CF community, and had so much passion for the community for so long, that he eased a lot of those [fears].
"Youth may be particularly susceptible to suicide contagion, which can be fostered by stories that sensationalize or promote simplistic explanations of suicidal behavior, glorify or romanticize the decedent, present suicide as a means of accomplishing a goal, or offer potential prescriptions of how-to die by suicide," said Jeff Bridge, director of the Center for Suicide Prevention and Research at Nationwide Children's and the lead author of the study.
But she doesn't romanticize life on the reservation, 524 square miles of rolling hills, evergreen forests, and ranch and farmland where her people were moved by order of President Grant in 1873 — now half the size of the territory originally granted by that treaty, and less than a tenth of the 3.5 million acres the Coeur d'Alene tribe once occupied across what is now Eastern Washington, North Idaho, and Western Montana.
Looking at these shows and initiatives might lead us to romanticize the pervasive sense of informality in contemporary Russian art, but it is also necessary to remain critical and realize that at times the curatorial concepts seem so theoretical that they reduce the works shown to a network of functional relations in which art becomes secondary, while at the same time the curators haven't had enough time to pursue intensive research in their artistic selection — they worked with what was available.

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