Event class: work, book, published, wrote, art, literary, works, life, poetry, writing

normalize
de-normalize

Events with high posterior probability

Grafton Elliot Smith The term' hyperdiffusionism' seems to have been coined by the British archaeologist Glyn Daniel in his book The Idea of Prehistory (1962) with a somewhat derogatory intention.
Stephen Greenblatt Greenblatt first used the term `` new historicism'' in his 1982 introduction to The Power of Forms in the English Renaissance wherein he uses Queen Elizabeth's `` bitter reaction to the revival of Shakespeare's Richard II on the eve of the Essex rebellion'' to illustrate the `` mutual permeability of the literary and the historical''.
Yagana ChangeziIn 2003 Kulliyat-i-Yagana was compiled by Pakistani scholar and writer Mushfiq Khwaja and has the opinion that Yagana or his publishers appeared to be naive regarding the art of presentation.
Eug?ne MaraisThe social anthropologist Robert Ardrey said in his introduction to The Soul of the Ape, published in 1969, that'' As a scientist he was unique, supreme in his time, yet a worker in a science unborn.''
Yevgeny TarleIn 1951, Tarle replied in Bolshevik magazine to Kozhukhov's criticism stating that he had already begun work on a new book on the Napoleonic period which would contain different interpretations than his earlier works.
Eleanor Ross TaylorIn a 2002 interview with Taylor, Susan Settlemyre Williams proposed Emily Dickinson, Marianne Moore, and Elizabeth Bishop as possible influences, but Taylor herself acknowledged Edna St. Vincent Millay as the poet she had read enthusiastically as a student, and who had'' made me feel that poetry was contemporary and could relate to me right now, in the way that you know that all those wonderful heroines of poetry and heroes do,...''.
Grace PaleyPaley summarized her view of teaching during a symposium on'' Educating the Imagination'' sponsored by the Teachers & Writers Collaborative in 1996 :'' Our idea,'' Paley said,'' was that children -- by writing, by putting down words, by reading, by beginning to love literature, by the inventiveness of listening to one another -- could begin to understand the world better and to make a better world for themselves.
Benjamin Wilson (biblical scholar) Wilson's main legacy consists in two areas : The original 1865 Fowler and Wells edition of the Emphatic Diaglott was one of the earliest interlinear Greek-English New Testaments published in America and thus had considerable influence.
Xavier VillaurrutiaThe preoccupation with death in Villaurrutia's work would climax with his 1941 with his play Invitación à la muerte, the title of which can be literally translated to'' Invitation to the death'' (see'' References'' below regarding Dr. Raymond Marion Watkins's book which chronicles a history and analysis of this play, which Watkins demonstrates was heavily influenced by Villaurrutia's integration of dramatic elements traceable to William Shakespeare's'' Hamlet.'')
Cleanth BrooksIn his later years, Brooks criticized the poststructuralists for inviting subjectivity and relativism into their analysis, asserting'' each critic played with the text's language unmindful of aesthetic relevance and formal design'' (Leitch 2001).
Rainer Maria RilkeQuoting Susan Haskins :'' It was Rilke's explicit belief that Christ was not divine, was entirely human, and deified only on Calvary, expressed in an unpublished poem of 1893, and referred to in other poems of the same period, which allowed him to portray Christ's love for Mary Magdalen, though remarkable, as entirely human.''
G. H. HardyIn a 1947 lecture, the Danish mathematician Harald Bohr reported a colleague as saying,'' Nowadays, there are only three really great English mathematicians : Hardy, Littlewood, and Hardy -- Littlewood.''
H. Bruce FranklinHe started out as a scholar of Herman Melville ; his first book, The Wake of the Gods : Melville's Mythology, which has been in print since its publication in 1963, examines Melville's use of mythologies most 20th-Century scholars are not familiar with : one expects references to Judaeo-Christian or Greco-Roman lore, but Melville's intellectual milieu was well-informed on many other cultures, from Meso-American to Sanskrit.
David Bierk In a June 2001 Art in America review, critic Jonathan Goodman writes that'' Bierk quotes from the past not so much to critique current art as to reinterpret a way of seeing that he associates with artists as disparate as Vermeer, Eakins, Ingres, Manet and Fantin-Latour'', and that Bierk'' accomplishes this particularly well when he starkly juxtaposes two or three of his eclectic art-historical references within a single work.''
Ikbal Ali ShahAccording to Professor L. F. Rushbrook Williams, the editor of a work published in honor of the services to sufi studies of Ikbal Ali Shah's son Idries,'' Sirdar Ikbal and his son -LSB- Idries Shah -RSB-, both in writing and in other ways, were ultimately to show how Sufi thought and action, educational and adaptive as they are, could be of service to contemporary thinking'' and he concluded in 1973 that''... whereas Sirdar Ikbal Ali Shah, who pioneered the effective study of Sufi philosophy in the West, found that the time was not quite ripe for his message to be appreciated at its true value, Idries Shah has discovered that in this age of spiritual uncertainty and a dawning reaction against the prevalent materialism, the outlook and practices of Sufism are meeting exactly the needs that so many people are now experiencing.''
Enid BlytonBlyton's attitudes came under criticism during her working lifetime ; a publisher rejected a story of hers in 1960, taking a negative literary view of it but also saying that'' There is a faint but unattractive touch of old-fashioned xenophobia in the author's attitude to the thieves ; they are' foreign'... and this seems to be regarded as sufficient to explain their criminality.''
John Trask (cricketer) In Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 1918 work The New Revelation, Doyle gives his own views and thoughts on the relationship between spiritual revelations and conventional religious dogma.
Carl RogersIn a study by Haggbloom et al. (2002) using six criteria such as citations and recognition, Rogers was found to be the sixth most eminent psychologist of the 20th century and second, among clinicians, only to Sigmund Freud.
Hans PfitznerComposer Wolfgang Rihm commented on the increasing popularity of Pfitzner's work in 1981 : Pfitzner is too progressive, not simply, the way Korngold can be taken to be ; he is also too conservative, if that means to be influenced by someone like Schoenberg.
Thom GunnThe poet's major stylistic change in his shift toward free verse roughly within a decade that included much of the 1960s, combined with the other changes in his life -- his move from England to America, from academic Cambridge to bohemian San Francisco, his becoming openly gay, his drug-taking, his writing about the'' urban underbelly'' -- caused many to conjecture how his lifestyle was affecting his work'' British reviewers who opposed Gunn's technical shifts blamed California, just as American critics would, later on, connect his adventurous lifestyle with his more' relaxed' versification,'' according to Orr, who added that even as of 2009, critics were contrasting'' Gunn's libido with his tight metrics -- as if no one had ever written quatrains about having sex before''.
Theodor W. AdornoYet conflicts between the so-called Darmstadt school, which included composers like Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Karel Goeyvaerts, Luciano Berio and Gottfried Michael Koenig, soon arose, receiving explicit expression in Adorno's 1954 lecture,'' The Aging of the New Music'', where he argued that atonality's freedom was being restricted to serialism in much the same way as it was once restricted by twelve-tone technique.
Alexander Veltman Boris Yakovlevich Bukhshtab, in his 1963 article'' Pervye romany Vel' tmana'' (Veltman's earliest novels), wrote :'' In the history of Russian literature there is no other writer who, having enjoyed as much popularity in his own time as Vel' tman, so rapidly disappeared into complete oblivion.''
Karen Joy FowlerThe Nebula panel concluded Fowler satisfied these requirements and awarded her the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 2003 on her work `` What I Did n't See'' despite controversy over whether the story fit within the genre.
Thomas EakinsJohn Canaday, art critic for The New York Times, wrote in 1964 : As a supreme realist, Eakins appeared heavy and vulgar to a public that thought of art, and culture in general, largely in terms of a graceful sentimentality.
Cleanth BrooksHe describes summative, reductionist reading of poetry with a phrase still popular today :'' The Heresy of Paraphrase'' (Leitch 2001).
James SmethamHe was also an essayist and art critic ; an article on Blake (in the form of a review of Alexander Gilchrist's Life of William Blake), which appeared in the January 1869 issue of the Quarterly Review, influenced and advanced recognition of Blake's artistic importance.
N?stor BraunsteinSince 2003 he has turned his attention to the subject of memory, articulating the meaning and research on the ability to remember in psychoanalysis and its constant references (Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan) and those sources that can be derived from other disciplines such as literature, philosophy, history and neuroscience.
Joseph CampbellIn the 2000 documentary Joseph Campbell : A Hero's Journey, he explains God in terms of a metaphor : God is a metaphor for a mystery that absolutely transcends all human categories of thought, even the categories of being and non-being.
Eugenia Falleni In the intervening years, after the publication by the press and popular crime writers of a large amount of speculation and various contradictory accounts of his life (many of them propagated by Falleni himself, who had grown up believing that impersonating a man was a criminal offense), the case was largely forgotten until the appearance of a detailed biography of Falleni in 1988, after which his story was taken up in Australia by a number of artists, playwrights and short film makers, museum and photography curators, and academics with an interest in gender studies.
Francis Webb (poet)In 1967, Webb was praised by the eminent critic Sir Herbert Read as'' one of the greatest poets of our time... one of the most unjustly neglected poets of the century,'' and has since attracted substantial critical acclaim for his profound vision, his unique spiritual quest to discover the heart of things.
Georg Gottfried GervinusMany brilliant passages will be found in his general History of the 19th Century, such as the accounts of the South American and Greek revolutions, and of the July revolution in 1830 ; and his Historische Schriften also contain a number of valuable treatises and essays, which may be said to have paved the way to a new era in the art of writing history.
Sun RaHer 2013 exhibition'' 17'''' arises out of -LSB- her -RSB- research into the legacy of Sun Ra, who was himself a student of numerology and achieved a kind of cultural immortality the number 17 might be said to refer to.''
?mile Zola thumb | left | upright | Édouard Manet, Portrait of Émile Zola, 1868, -LSB- -LSB- Musée d'Orsay -RSB- -RSB- For a writer who so strongly asserted the claim of Naturalist literature to be an experimental analysis of human psychology, Zola has seemed to many critics like György Lukács, to be strangely deficient in the power of creating lifelike and memorable characters.
Jones VeryThe modern reassessment of Jones Very as an author of literary importance can be dated to a 1936 essay by Yvor Winters who wrote of the poet, `` In the past two decades two major American writers have been rediscovered and established securely in their rightful places in literary history.
Ramana Maharshi C. G. Jung objected to regarding Ramana as an'' isolated phenomenon'' Jung wrote the foreword to Heinrich Zimmer's Der Weg zum Selbst,'' The Path to the Self'' (1944), an early collection of translations of Ramana's teachings in a western language.
George RochbergHe compared atonality to abstract art and tonality to concrete art and compared his artistic evolution with Philip Guston's, saying'' the tension between concrete ness and abstraction'' is a fundamental issue for both of them (Rochberg, 1992).
Juli?n GayarreTheir collective opinions are encapsulated by the following assessment published in the 1963 Ricordi Enciclopedia della musica : Gayarre's voice was slightly guttural and at times could show hardness in the very high notes and an uncertain attack.
Fyodor TyutchevA late poem of 1870 with the title K. B. (Ia vstretil vas - i vsio biloe), long accepted on dubious evidence as addressed to Amélie, is now thought much more likely to refer to Tyutchev's sister-in-law Clotilde (or Klothilde) von Bothmer.
John R. TunisIn both these books Tunis returns to a favorite theme noted by Ryan K. Anderson in his survey of Tunis' World War II era writings ; that parents, administrators, gamblers and other adult fans'' injected improper values'' 1949 saw the publication of his next-to-last book about the Dodgers.
Bliss Carman In his review of 1954's Selected Poems of Bliss Carman, literary critic Northrop Frye compared Carman and the other Confederation Poets to the Group of Seven :'' Like the later painters, these poets were lyrical in tone and romantic in attitude ; like the painters, they sought for the most part uninhabited landscape.''
Nikolai LeskovThe inability of the new literary ideologists to counterbalance demands of propaganda with attempts at objectivity was evidenced in the 1932 Soviet Literary Encyclopedia entry, which said :'' In our times when the problem-highlighting type of novel has gained prominence, opening up new horizons for socialism and construction, Leskov's relevancy as a writer, totally foreign to the major tendencies of our Soviet literature, naturally wanes.
Karl GutzkowHis strong controversial purpose obscured his artistic genius, but his work profoundly influenced the popular thought of c. 1910 Germany, and gives one of the best pictures we have of the intellectual life and the social struggle of his generation and nation.
Charles E. BurchfieldIn his writings he expressed an aim to depict an earlier era in the history of human consciousness when man saw gods and spirits in natural objects and forces, and art historian and critic John Canaday predicted in a 1966 New York Times review that the grandeur and power of these pictures would be Burchfield's enduring achievement.
Giuseppe UngarettiThe hope of brotherhood between all the people is expressed strongly, together with the desire of searching for a renovated'' harmony'' with the universe, impressive in the famous verses of Mattina : I illuminate (myself) with immensity (Flora, August 2010) A famous poem regarding the First World War is'' Soldati'' (soldiers) : (Here we are like leaves on trees, in Autumn) (Flora, August 2010) In the successive works he studied the importance of the poetic word (marked by Hermeticism and symbolism), as the only way to save the humanity from the universal horror, and was searching for a new way to recuperate the roots of the Italian classical poetry.
Walter de la MareFor children, de la Mare wrote the fairy tale The Three Mulla Mulgars (1910, AKA The Three Royal Monkeys), praised by literary historian Julia Briggs as a'' neglected masterpiece'' and by critic Brian Stableford as a'' classic animal fantasy''.
H. BonciuWriting in 2005, Simuţ found Bonciu'' outdated'' and'' utterly modest'' as a poet, linking his work in the field with the late-19th-century Decadent movement.
Ezra PoundKasper opened a bookstore in Greenwich Village in 1953 called'' Make it New,'' reflecting his commitment to Pound's ideas ; it specialized in far-right material, including Nazi literature, and Pound's poetry and translations were displayed in the window.
Sami Michael The Hebrew University (1995) `` a distinguished writer of the generation that witnessed the early years of Israel's statehood, Michael sheds light on aspects of life that rarely feature in Israeli literature and empowers his work with a use of true-life artistry that strips away outmoded myths and hackneyed forms of description.''
Zuzanna GinczankaWriting in February 1936 to the editor-in-chief of the literary monthly Kamena, Kazimierz Andrzej Jaworski, Bocheński excoriates the well-known poets Tuwim and Pawlikowska while at the same time stating the following : : Jastrun inspires interest, -LSB- as does -RSB- Ginczanka, otherwise unknown to me : I feel instinctively that we are dealing here with a deeper nature, with poetry of a higher pedigree (rasowsza poezja) ; who is she ?
Cleanth BrooksFrom I. A. Richards' The Principles of Literary Criticism and Practical Criticism, Brooks formulated guidelines for interpreting poetry (Leitch 2001).
Nur Ali ElahiIn 1966 he published his second work,'' Commentary on the Book of the Kings of Truth'' (Ḥaqq al-ḥaqāyiq yā Shāhnāmah-ʾi ḥaqīqat), a commentary on his father's epic poem that expounded upon the determination of places and dates, the historical accuracy of certain events cited therein, and the concept of divine manifestation.
Cleanth BrooksBrooks formulated these guidelines in reaction to ornamentalist theories of poetry, to the common practice of critics going outside the poem (to historical or biographical contexts), and his and Warren's frustration with trying to teach college students to analyze poetry and literature (Leitch 2001).
Barbara Probst SolomonBut her 1992 novel, Smart Hearts in the City, is a banana peel that can slide us out of our customary disappointment with the short range and the low ambition of contemporary American fiction... The mulatto textures of Katy Becker's world and the many, many ways in which Barbara Probst Solomon has elevated her epic sense of Americana into literature, subtle to raw, is an achievement that should take a lasting place in the writing about the riddle of the human spirit as expressed within the context of this polyglot nation's bittersweet and stinking little secrets.''
Alice FultonFulton first proposed her ideas for a new poetics based on the concepts of fractals and emergent patterns in her 1986 essay,'' Of Formal, Free, and Fractal Verse : Singing the Body Eclectic,'' in which she uses the term'' fractal'' to suggest'' a way to think about the hidden structures of free verse.''
Karl LuegerFor example, when Austrian-born neurobiologist Eric Kandel won the Nobel Prize in 2000, he'' stuck it to the Austrians'' by saying it was certainly not an Austrian Nobel, it was a Jewish-American Nobel.
Boris Thomashefsky-LSB- Adler, 1999, 329, 330 -RSB- His production of'' Hamlet'' was more than just a direct translation.
Gutzon BorglumA patriot, believing that the'' monuments we have built are not our own,'' he looked to create art that was'' American, drawn from American sources, memorializing American achievement,'' according to a 1908 interview article.
A. N. WilsonHis work, Dante in Love published in 2011, presents a study of the great Italian poet Dante Alighieri, as an artist and philosopher, also depicting an in-depth portrait of medieval Florence in order to help readers to understand the literary and cultural background that engendered the Tuscan's masterpiece, The Divine Comedy.
Kelly CherryAccording to the citation preceding her receipt of the James G. Hanes Poetry Prize by the Fellowship of Southern Writers in 1989,'' Her poetry is marked by a firm intellectual passion, a reverent desire to possess the genuine thought of our century, historical, philosophical, and scientific, and a species of powerful ironic wit which is allied to rare good humor.''
Sylvia BrowneAmong the predictions examined in the study were the following : In a 2013 follow-up article, Shaffer reviewed more recent predictions by Browne, as well as predictions whose outcomes had been earlier classified as undetermined but were now largely resolved.
Henry BellamannAlthough his poetry is today little-known, Bellamann was recognized by David Perkins in his 1976 History of Modern Poetry, in which he ranks Bellamann with the serious minor poets who'' adopted the mode'' of the Imagists.
Fritz MauthnerIn Gescheiterte Sprachkritik : Fritz Mauthner's Leben und Werk, Joachim Kühn (1979) connects the work of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett to the'' skeptical school'' of German writing that has, Kühn argues, its origin in the work of philosophers such as Fritz Mauthner.
RamakrishnaIn 1995, Jeffrey J. Kripal argued in Kali's Child that the Ramakrishna Movement had manipulated Ramakrishna's biographical documents, that the Movement had published them in incomplete and bowdlerised editions (claiming among other things, hiding Ramakrishna's homoerotic tendencies), and that the Movement had suppressed Ram Chandra Datta's Srisriramakrsna Paramahamsadever Jivanavrttanta.
Evelyn WaughThere was general relief among critics when Scoop, in 1938, indicated a return to Waugh's earlier comic style ; critics had begun to think that his wit had been displaced by partisanship and propaganda.
Leonid AndreyevHis particular interest in psychology and psychiatry gave him an opportunity to explore insights into the human psyche and to depict memorable personalities who later became classic characters of Russian literature ('' Thought'' 1902).
Arnold SchoenbergDuring his life, he was'' subjected to a range of criticism and abuse that is shocking even in hindsight'' (Haimo 1990, 2 -- 3).
Barry FarberHe mentioned in the 2005 interview that he still constantly learns bits and pieces of new language -- some Albanian phrases or a new phrase each time he went into a grocery store where a Tibetan woman works.
Joseph CampbellBy the time that The Power of Myth was aired in 1988, six months following Campbell's death,'' Follow your bliss'' was a philosophy that resonated deeply with the American public -- both religious and secular.
Jeremiah Curtin-LSB-... -RSB- The'' inelasticity'' -LSB- that the Briton, Sir Edmund William Gosse spoke of -LSB- in 1897 -RSB- is perhaps nowhere so clearly evident in Curtin's translations as in his insistence on rendering koniecznie as'' absolutely'' in all circumstances.
David Josef BachDescribing him as'' A linguist, a philosopher, a connoisseur of literature, and a mathematician'' as well as'' a good musician'', Schoenberg paid tribute to his friend by claiming that it was D. J. Bach who furnished his character with'' the ethical and moral power needed to withstand vulgarity and commonplace popularity'' (' My Evolution', 1949).
Samuel Noah KramerIn his autobiography published in 1986, he sums up his accomplishments :'' First, and most important, is the role I played in the recovery, restoration, and resurrection of Sumerian literature, or at least of a representative cross section... Through my efforts several thousand Sumerian literary tablets and fragments have been made available to cuneiformists, a basic reservoir of unadulterated data that will endure for many decades to come.
Ranjit HoskoteThe critic Bruce King writes of Hoskote's early work in his influential Modern Indian Poetry in English (revised edition : Oxford, 2001) :'' Hoskote has an historical sense, is influenced by the surreal, experiments with metrics and has a complex sense of the political... An art critic, he makes much use of landscapes, the sky and allusions to paintings.
Ram Chandra DattaIn 1890, Ram Chandra wrote the biography of saint Ramakrishna Paramahamsa's Life and Teachings in which he has used the expression guhya katha meaning `` secret talk'' attributed to the saint himself which pertained to secret tantric revelations.
Arthur OrtonIn his analysis of the affair, Rohan McWilliam considers the extent of recognition remarkable, given the physical bulk and unrefined manners of the Claimant, as compared with the Roger Tichborne of 1854.
Charles Sanders PeirceHe wrote many texts in James Mark Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology (1901 -- 5) ; half of those credited to him appear to have been written actually by Christine Ladd-Franklin under his supervision.
Abu Bakr EffendiIt was divided into 8 parts, each dealing with a specific part of Islamic law : # ritual cleansing (pp. 2 -- 66) # ritual prayer (pp. 66 -- 219) # religious tax (pp. 219 -- 258) # fasting (pp. 258 -- 284) # slaughtering of livestock (pp. 284 -- 302) # religious prohibitions (pp. 302 -- 344) # drink (pp. 344 -- 349) # hunting (pp. 349 -- 354) Adrianus van Selms, a Dutch scholar and Semitic researcher, published a transliteration in Latin Script of Abu Bakr Effendi's work in 1979.
Pearl S. BuckPhyllis Bentley, in an overview of Buck's work published in 1935, was altogether impressed :'' But we may say at least that for the interest of her chosen material, the sustained high level of her technical skill, and the frequent universality of her conceptions, Mrs. Buck is entitled to take rank as a considerable artist.
John A. HobsonV. I. Lenin, in Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916) - which was probably his most influential work on later Marxian scholarship - made use of Hobson's Imperialism extensively, remarking in the preface'' I made use of the principal English work, Imperialism, J. A. Hobson's book, with all the care that, in my opinion, that work deserves.''
E. H. Carrproved be very controversial, and inspired Sir Geoffrey Elton to write his 1967 book The Practice of History in response, defending traditional historical methods.
Dornford YatesIt is the Chandos novels to which Alan Bennett especially refers in naming Dornford Yates in the play Forty Years On (1972) :'' Sapper, Buchan, Dornford Yates, practitioners in that school of Snobbery with Violence that runs like a thread of good-class tweed through twentieth-century literature.''
William John FitzpatrickBut his next book, The Life and Times of Bishop Doyle (1861), was much more successful, and, besides giving a vivid picture of a powerful personality, it provides a useful contribution to Irish nineteenth-century history.
Margaret Caroline AndersonCelebrating the life and work of Margaret Anderson and the Little Review's remarkable influence, an exhibition'' Making No Compromise : Margaret Anderson and the Little Review'' was opened at the Beinecke Library, Yale University, from October, 2006, and ran for three months.
Alfred BinetBinet also stressed that intellectual development progressed at variable rates and could be influenced by the environment ; therefore, intelligence was not based solely on genetics, was malleable rather than fixed, and could only be found in children with comparable backgrounds (Siegler, 1992).
Thom GunnIn the 1960s, however, he came to experiment increasingly with free verse, and the discipline of writing to a specific set of visual images, coupled with the liberation of free verse, constituted a new source of rule and energy in Gunn's work : a poem such as'' Pierce Street'' in his next collection, Touch (1967), has a grainy, photographic fidelity, while the title-poem uses hesitant, sinuous free verse to portray a scene of newly acknowledged intimacy shared with his sleeping lover (and the cat).
Alexander Gardner (photographer)This argument, first put forth by William Frassanito in 1975, goes this way : Gardner and his assistants Timothy O'Sullivan and James Gibson had dragged the sniper's body 40 yards into the more photogenic surroundings of the Devil's Den to create a better composition.
Georges MalkineIn his 1970 monograph of Malkine, Patrick Waldberg (French art historian) wrote,'' -LSB- Malkine -RSB- is perhaps the only artist about whom it can be said that through his life and his work, reality and dreams may cease to be viewed contrarily.''
Timothy SteeleAnd Susan Clair Imbarrato commented in 2006, in The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Poets and Poetry, that Steele's'' use of traditional forms and precise, accessible language has repositioned formal prosody into the rich palette of contemporary poetry.''
Cleanth BrooksStudying with Ransom and Warren, Brooks became involved in two significant literary movements : the Southern Agrarians and the Fugitives (Singh 1991).
Athanasios AsimakopulosHe even declined an invitation to be included in the first edition of Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer's admirable A Biographical Dictionary of Dissenting Economists (1992), because he regarded his views and contributions as belonging fully within the tradition of economics proper, not in a dissenting stream (he was included in the second edition).
Henri BergsonAccording to Hude (1990), this moral crisis is tied to his discovery of the theory of evolution, according to which humanity shares common ancestry with modern primates, a process generally construed as not needing a creative deity.
Ken MansfieldStumbling on Open Ground, his fourth, most heavily endorsed and insightful book, is also a Thomas Nelson Publishing release (January 15, 2013), and reaches a whole new audience for Ken's innovative writing approach.
Luigi NonoIn combination with Nono's strongly negative reaction to Stockhausen's interpretation of text-setting in Il canto sospeso, this effectively ended their friendship until the 1980s, and thus disbanded the'' avant-garde trinity'' of Boulez, Nono, and Stockhausen (Schoenberg-Nono 2005).
G. E. M. AnscombeIn 2010, philosopher Roger Scruton wrote that Anscombe was'' perhaps the last great philosopher writing in English''.
Martin FirrellFirrell's body of work includes investigations into portraiture (Text Portrait of Howard Jacobson, Booker Prize winner, 2010) and explorations of the power of mass popular culture to propagate socially useful ideas, in particular, the science fiction genre.
John P. MarquandCritic Martha Spaulding, writing in The Atlantic Monthly in 2004, noted that'' in his day Marquand was compared to Sinclair Lewis and John O'Hara, and his social portrait of twentieth-century America was likened to Balzac's Comédie Humaine, -LSB- but -RSB- critics rarely took him very seriously.
Anton BrucknerNicholas Temperley writes in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1980) that Bruckner alone succeeded in creating a new school of symphonic writing... Some have classified him as a conservative, some as a radical.
William Empson(Milton's God (1965), p. 13) Empson claims that it is precisely Milton's great sensitivity and faithfulness to the Scriptures, in spite of their apparent madness, that generates such a controversial picture of God : thus Empson reckons that it requires a mind of astonishing integrity to, in the words of Blake, be of the Devil's party without knowing it.
Thomas HardyOnce, when asked in correspondence by a clergyman about the question of reconciling the horrors of pain with the goodness of a loving God, Hardy replied, D. H. Lawrence's Study of Thomas Hardy (1936), indicates the importance of Hardy for him, even though this work is a platform for Lawrence's own developing philosophy rather than a more standard literary study.
Gustav von Schmoller As an outspoken leader of the'' younger'' historical school, Schmoller opposed what he saw as the axiomatic-deductive approach of classical economics and, later, the Austrian school -- indeed, Schmoller coined the term to suggest provincialism in an unfavorable review of the 1883 book Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences with Special Reference to Economics (Untersuchungen über die Methode der Socialwissenschaften und der politischen Oekonomie insbesondere) by Carl Menger, which attacked the methods of the historical school.
Evelyn UnderhillHer fiction was also influenced by the literary creed expounded by her close friend Arthur Machen, mainly his Hieroglyphics of 1902, summarised by his biographer : There are certain truths about the universe and its constitution -- as distinct from the particular things in it that come before our observation -- which can not be grasped by human reason or expressed in precise words : but they can be apprehended by some people at least, in a semi-mystical experience, called ecstasy, and a work of art is great insofar as this experience is caught and expressed in it.