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"chronicler" Definitions
  1. a person who records events in the order in which they happened, in a chronicle
"chronicler" Antonyms

273 Sentences With "chronicler"

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

GRAHAM GREENE, chronicler of hazy entrepots, would have loved Djibouti.
"The whole world was troubled," a chronicler in Salzburg wrote.
When the Occupy movement sprang up, she became its unofficial chronicler.
He is a sharp chronicler of Silicon Valley over the years.
Rockwell is mostly remembered as a sunny chronicler of small-town Americana.
But enormous effects and you can be the dominant chronicler of that.
In Edinburgh, he met Davidmann's mother, Audrey, an avid diarist and chronicler.
More is the challenge, then, for the serious chronicler of American violence.
"Every sport has a supreme chronicler," The Philadelphia Inquirer said in 1994.
I had spent my journalistic career as an observer and a chronicler.
She says that a chronicler (like Johnson) need not be meek and dispassionate.
Mr Shteyngart is a hilarious chronicler of the vicissitudes of the American Dream.
"Why should I wait?" she once told the Palm Beach chronicler Ronald Kessler.
See Asser Christensen's Coffee Chronicler blog for a brilliantly detailed breakdown on the differences.
But Mr. Ellickson, the most prolific chronicler of fictional candidates, is sanguine as Nov.
After returning to New York, she became a revolutionary chronicler of the modern metropolis.
A character named the Chronicler intones about Phillis Wheatley, Benjamin Banneker, and Sojourner Truth.
McDarrah was also an essential chronicler of the dawn of the gay rights era.
This work has made Ms Greenfield's name as the "foremost visual chronicler of the plutocracy".
According to Orderic Vitalis, another chronicler, on his deathbed William recalled what he had done.
Cariocas do not plant, they "just pluck", observes Ruy Castro, a chronicler of the city.
In the face of such complexity, it's easy for a chronicler to get bogged down.
" The Times's Parul Sehgal recently called Quammen "our greatest living chronicler of the natural world.
On the Cusp My go-to chronicler of teen angst back then was Zibby Oneal.
Hemingway was the best chronicler of his own life, or in modern terms: a hoarder.
Author-columnist Jimmy Breslin, the legendary street-smart chronicler of wise guys and underdogs, has died.
In the end, he's such a chronicler that his beats and flow will do you fine.
Arnold's Brazilian roots are part of what make him a compelling chronicler of the country's ills.
We were curious about that experience, so we called up our Yang chronicler extraordinaire, Matt Stevens.
The chi is not a guiding presence, but a witness to, and chronicler of, Chinonso's actions.
Who Tried It: Emily Kirkpatrick, Associate Style News Editor and chronicler of the KarJenner's daily fashion exploits.
Peter Mattei and René Pape returned as Amfortas and Gurnemanz, the wounded king and the wise chronicler.
Courageous heroes such as lynching chronicler Ida B. Wells were at first told they could not participate.
"You have to qualify to do the Ironman," said Alan Arnette, a prominent Everest chronicler and climber.
Pinckney "reveals himself to be a skillful chronicler of black experience," Lauretta Charlton writes in her review.
Take, for example, the 19th-century author Henry James, the great chronicler of cross-cultural sexual mores.
Edward Gibbon (1737-1794), the anti-Christian chronicler of Rome's decline, was one; Mr Johnson may be another.
She's been an essential chronicler and interpreter of this moment, and all that has led up to it.
Here, he reveals himself to be a skillful chronicler of black experience in literary criticism, reportage and biography.
Burial is the John Betjeman of South London's post-clubbing comedowners, a chronicler of greyness, ghosts, and grief.
Carver wasn't the only chronicler of the desperate class to receive what Mr. Trump might call a handout.
A discerning chronicler of cultural misunderstanding, she started the book just as nativist resentment became a political movement.
He is our greatest living chronicler of the natural world yet was never formally trained in the sciences.
Awards: Supporting Actress (Laura Dern) Noah Baumbach is America's foremost chronicler of rough-hewn and disintegrating family units.
" Steven Levy, a longtime chronicler of Silicon Valley, relies on a similar framing in "Facebook: The Inside Story.
BEIJING — It seemed that China's censors had finally muzzled Yang Jisheng, the famed chronicler of the Mao era.
"He really was an uncultivated Vegas stand-up," said David Patrick Columbia, the social chronicler, not without affection.
"He was an irresistible spirit, a warrior, superb writer and chronicler of his and our times," Mr. Oldham said.
Or maybe she simply wanted the attention to stoke her political ambitions, specifically from a respected chronicler like Greenfield.
Diana was a chronicler and an observer, prone to sharp personal criticisms and a punishing attention to social codes.
On the evidence of the film, he also served as a remarkable chronicler of life in the occupied city.
Lauren Greenfield has become America's foremost visual chronicler of the plutocracy — and those who hope to join its ranks.
Gabriel Sherman, longtime Fox News chronicler, reported on New York magazine's website that the motto was gone for good.
August Wilson, the renowned late playwright and chronicler of the 20th century African-American experience, is having a moment.
But unless you're a die-hard Liverpool fan or a fervent chronicler of doping cases, you probably never heard why.
Yet it's not clear how long it can remain a chronicler, rather than a subject, of Trump-era culture wars.
Diana B. Henriques is an award-winning financial journalist and a best-selling chronicler of the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme.
"These were well-organized gangs who were mostly fighting over turf," said Alex Kotlowitz, the great chronicler of Chicago's poor.
Our critics talk about the power of language and representation from the playwright, a great chronicler of the 20th century.
With this solo, Mr. Crewdson reclaims his spot as a heavyweight of staged photography and a chronicler of white existentialist angst.
Alexis de Tocqueville, the great chronicler of liberal America, cherished the diversity of local groups as a guard against state power.
The alleged Taiwanese trafficker was a diligent chronicler of the drug syndicate's activities, but sloppy when it came to information security.
But it was at Vanity Fair that Mr. Wayne (who calls himself G. W.) found his niche as a celebrity chronicler.
We see her as a chronicler of contemporary New York, in both its manic, flapper highs and its bread-line lows.
"His penetrating and sensitive portrayal of social realities made him a fine chronicler of our times," Mr. Kovind said on Twitter.
At its core, a music that speaks to the long, lonely night; a rich darkness that has in Jerkcurb a worthy chronicler.
Though known best as a novelist and essayist, he was also a master chronicler of the things he saw as a journalist.
For example, the sixteenth century Spanish chronicler Cristobal de Molina described various forms of Inca child sacrifice, including extraction of the heart.
Trifonov died in 1981, but his widow, Olga, who is seventy-eight, is a proud chronicler of her husband's life and work.
Like his gender-diverse wardrobe, his brand of fame is quintessentially modern: celebrity scion turned reality TV star turned Instagram self-chronicler.
Schlenker's illustrated biography, Milein Cosman: Capturing Time (2019), proves Cosman's importance both as an artist and as a chronicler of her time.
She returned to New York and, in just one stage of her long career, became a revolutionary chronicler of the modern metropolis.
Led by the astute chronicler of Harlem life, Roy DeCarava, the show aimed to reclaim the beauty of the African-American woman.
Or it may just be that he's a sensitive chronicler of modern life, an enormous proportion of which consists of committee work.
"Many factors, like gentrification and the fight for marriage equality, have contributed to the rise in homonormality," city chronicler Jeremiah Moss told Musto.
Ms. Ivins, who died in 2007, was a fearless political reporter and a loving chronicler of the quirky human landscape of the Southwest.
The history of embroidery affords a glimpse of "the private inner world" of women, as a chronicler of the Korean tradition puts it.
Benny Morris, a chronicler of the fighting that attended Israel's birth, has written bluntly about incidents in which Arabs were killed or expelled.
Together, these books make a persuasive case for regarding Ikonomou as Greece's most original and perceptive chronicler of his country's fears and yearnings.
One early chronicler claimed to have seen white sands strewn with skeletons; another conjured poisonous dust clouds swooping over fields of glittering gems.
This prodigious rate of creativity is normal for Mr. Hong, a chronicler of the human condition and the pleasures and pitfalls of attraction.
A young, relatively unknown Joseph Brodsky came to visit; so did his fellow future Nobel recipient Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the chronicler of the gulag.
Feature From "Idiocracy" to "Silicon Valley," the writer and director has established himself as America's foremost chronicler of its own self-destructive tendencies.
" In 2016, Mr. Trump's tabloid chronicler in chief, Cindy Adams, wrote in her column: "Watch for a quickly built Trump White House ballroom.
Its controlled phrasing was seen as "a kick up the backside" to the era of romantic crooners, according to Ruy Castro, bossa nova's chronicler.
But the majority of the book is a conversation between Francis and Tornielli, who has established himself as an enthusiastic chronicler of Francis's papacy.
This makes Wolitzer, in most ways, the perfect chronicler of the current crop of young people, who by and large have the same problems.
Mr. Harris was a prolific chronicler of the early 20th century and ended up donating much of his work to the Library of Congress.
It's not that Harris has a particularly gruesome imagination, it's that he's a keen observer and a chronicler of people and their darkest impulses.
He was also an expert chronicler of Manhattan's Meatpacking district, when meatpacking actually took place, and the gay life along the West Side piers.
In 288, Mr. Wolfe joined The Herald Tribune as a reporter on the city desk, where he found his voice as a social chronicler.
It's especially difficult to find disciplined professionals like Nate Colgan, an enforcer for the Jamieson gang and the reliable chronicler of Malcolm Mackay's novel.
Bucky Turco, a chronicler of New York's underground art and culture scene, has said that Mr. Woods also acted as an early graffiti historian.
If you're already an outfit-chronicler, this is one of the best qualities of this gadget: it does it for you, hands-free, full-length.
Tamerlane spared nothing but hospitals and mosques as he went on what a contemporary chronicler called a "pilgrimage of destruction" across the region's great cities.
Rebecca Traister, New York magazine contributor and author of All the Single Ladies, is the most insightful chronicler of Clinton's life in the public eye.
But Als is always meditating upon his personal relationships at the same time as he imagines them: He is a reflexive chronicler, not a diarist.
Phil Collins, the chronicler of failed relationships, recently reconciled with his third ex-wife, Orianne Cevey, after an eight-year separation (and $123 million divorce).
Ines Schlenker's illustrated biography, Milein Cosman: Capturing Time, proves Cosman's importance both as an artist and as a chronicler of her period in artistic history.
The little-heralded character of Watson, in his role as chronicler of Holmes's exploits, constituted a radical departure in both detective fiction and serialized storytelling.
Anne Tyler, that beloved and clear-eyed chronicler of troubled families, adapted the story into her new novel, Vinegar Girl, for the Hogarth Shakespeare series.
In this way he became the foremost chronicler of a revolution in consciousness enacted as a world dominated by things morphed into one glutted by images.
KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Elizabeth Hawley, a leading chronicler of expeditions on Himalayan peaks in Nepal, died on Friday at a private hospital in Kathmandu, her doctor said.
Ms Jamison proves both an insightful guide to decades of literature by and about addicts, and a self-aware chronicler of her own struggle with alcoholism.
I think you are the best-known chronicler of the media and the media mogul beat, what the New York Times calls corporate media these days.
Co-founder of VII Photo Agency, he's built a reputation as a relentless chronicler of humanity at its extremes, building an impressive body of war photography.
"Portions of our Gulf waters became poisoned in some way that caused the death of all fish that they came into contact with," wrote another chronicler.
She is a comedian of manners, and a fastidious chronicler of her chosen country, whose map stretches from Anglican suburbia to country parishes and metropolitan London.
"There is a real sense of pride that both teams are so strong," said José Antonio Martín, a chronicler of Atlético's history under the pseudonym Petón.
But his unique role as a participant in, and a chronicler of, Egyptian history drew politicians of all stripes — liberals, nationalists, even Islamists — to seek his counsel.
In his view, Rastorguev may have been "the most outstanding chronicler of this mad, somewhat meaningless and cruel Russian life at the beginning of the new century".
On a dark Saturday afternoon in February James Ellroy, America's pre-eminent crime novelist and chronicler of depravity and excess, was having problems with his central heating.
Cunningham worked for the New York Times for nearly 40 years, operating "as a dedicated chronicler of fashion and as an unlikely cultural anthropologist," the newspaper said.
That's why Wolff might be the perfect chronicler of the Trump era, as one of his fiercest critics even acknowledges: Essentially, Wolff is the Trump of journalism.
Zora Neale Hurston, an exquisite chronicler of black Americana, understood the magic and necessity of the porch as a gathering place to witness and soak up history.
It took an audacious leap for Vasari to see himself as the defining chronicler of his era, the preserver of life stories, the collector of paper scraps.
Julia Moskin, stalwart reporter, evaluated styles of French fry, and Tejal Rao, steadfast chronicler of the ice cream truck business did the same for packaged frozen treats.
The success of Mr. Allcard's first trip across the Atlantic established him as one of the world's foremost mariners, as well as a deft chronicler of seafaring.
The event "was a line-in-the-sand night, to an extent I didn't expect," E. J. Dionne, a longtime Washington chronicler, said in the ballroom afterward.
It is an argument that The Economist's connections to power have made it a participant in the building of the liberal project rather than just a chronicler.
That an author famous for slick, stylish evocation of drug-addled youth has evolved into a restrained, almost sombre chronicler of professional-class ennui may seem surprising.
The more famous one is recounted in an unpublished manuscript called Basic Art, authored by prolific mail artist, art writer, and self-appointed "Nut chronicler" David Zack.
She writes a eulogy for her friend Joseph Mitchell, the matchless chronicler of New York, and memorializes a long-running radio program she loved in her youth.
Artists and writers are his principal guides: Rob Donn, an 18th-century crofter-chronicler, sits companionably alongside the modern Scottish poet Robin Robertson, their writing harmonising across time.
In two brief sections written 30 years apart, Between Them gives a sense of how Richard Ford the dyslexic delinquent became Richard Ford, chronicler of the American everyman.
Ultimately, in the collection of images, one can see the painter and contemporary image maker that is Miller vying against the Miller who is a more sentimental chronicler.
But in this volume there appears a new Joyce Carol Oates I like even better than the hallucinatory chronicler of madness and violence performed on and by children.
Will that be enough to help the company which in many ways defined the last century of American life rebound to become a crucial chronicler of this one?
The happy couple were John of Gaunt, son of King Edward III, and his bride, Blanche of Lancaster, whose virtues would be commemorated by the chronicler Jean Froissart.
Franklin's aim is to establish Jackson as both a major figure in the American Gothic tradition and a significant, proto-feminist chronicler of mid-twentieth-century women's lives.
Noah Baumbach is America's foremost chronicler of rough-hewn and disintegrating family units, and in Marriage Story, he pries open one divorce to find the beating heart inside.
"These days," said Johnson, the Huskies' chronicler, "I think the Pac-12 and the West Coast — and maybe even the North — has an inferiority complex to the South."
Luiselli is a superb chronicler of children, and the narrator's 5-year-old daughter and her husband's 10-year-old son feel piercingly real — perceptive, irreplaceable, wonderfully odd.
"Iran hides its failures and exaggerates its successes," said Shea Cotton, a chronicler of Iranian launchings at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, based in Monterey, Calif.
But with advancing age comes clarity of sorts from an unreliable self-chronicler whom this mercurial performer and her observant director, Jonathan Kent, bring brilliantly to the boil.
Mr Figes is best known as a chronicler of Russia itself, and of the ways its cultural and political masters have juggled indigenous traditions with those from the West.
"The internet is the modern form of culture," says Adam Downer, an associate editor at Know Your Meme, the biggest online database and chronicler of meme definition and history.
The great chronicler of this year's presidential vote, Dave Wasserman of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report, declared it official on Thursday: Jill Stein is the Ralph Nader of 2016.
Mr. Lukacs (pronounced LOO-kuss) was a chronicler of modern Europe, a commentator on semantics and current events, and a romantic who lamented the vanished charm of the bourgeoisie.
He was a bit of a square, he admitted, and an unlikely chronicler of the bohemian world he saw coming into view in Greenwich Village in the mid-219s.
With a quirky résumé that includes two documentaries about the Westboro Baptist Church, the British journalist and filmmaker Louis Theroux has proved himself a seasoned chronicler of human eccentricity.
Demand shot up whenever Jeff Klinkenberg, a longtime Duncan devotee and veteran chronicler of Florida culture for The Tampa Bay Times, wrote that Mr. Tillett still had a few.
Over the years, she became a highly-respected chronicler of mountain climbing in the Himalayan nation, which is home to eight of the world's 14 highest peaks, including Mount Everest.
"Nothing, literally nothing, in the history of sports and politics can compare to what happened [that] Sunday," marveled the Nation's Dave Zirin, perhaps the foremost chronicler of sports and politics.
Ms. Huste sealed her fate a few weeks later when, unknown to her employer, she talked to Maxine Cheshire, chronicler of the social and political elite for The Washington Post.
And yet, Berlin is not only a soulful chronicler of the lost corners of America, whose semi-autobiographical stories brim with red caliche clay, arroyos, drainage ditches and smelter towns.
To his credit, Green acknowledges how difficult it is for the "inside chronicler" to serve as historian, but his lack of objectivity affects the narrative and analysis in important ways.
" Gregory of Tours, the bishop and chronicler who recorded their story, is keen to depict the princesses as spoiled brats, especially Clotilda, whom he described as "swollen up with boastfulness.
Now, with the opening of her multi-media solo exhibit, Astro Noise, at New York's Whitney Museum of American Art this week, Snowden's chronicler has finally turned her lens onto herself.
But really — the designer of Versace and Versus Versace is not only talented and, you know, a pretty glamorous household name; she's also quite the chronicler of her own life's festivities.
But according to Thursday's report by The Intercept's ace Dragonfly chronicler Ryan Gallagher, Google's explorations had already reached the final stages of development by the time word of the project leaked.
NEW YORK — Author-columnist Jimmy Breslin, the Pulitzer Prize-winning chronicler of wise guys and underdogs who became the brash embodiment of the old-time, street smart New Yorker, died Sunday.
Even as a participant in and chronicler of that wave of activism, I was uncertain about just what we meant by democracy and why we seemed to want it so badly.
While grappling with long suppressed anxiety and depression because of that cultural tension, he saw an exhibition of the work of Zanele Muholi, the chronicler of queer experience in South Africa.
Noah Baumbach may be American cinema's greatest chronicler of family dysfunction — and his newest film, The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected), may be one of his finest entries in the genre.
At 62, Metcalf is now being widely recognized for what she has always been, an actress of remarkable power, range and skill, a pre-eminent chronicler of the American working woman.
Since releasing his debut solo album, "Heartbreaker," in 2000, the singer-songwriter Ryan Adams has become a singular chronicler of the euphoric highs of love and the miserable lows of heartbreak.
Here's an antacid: a literate, perpetually curious, good-humored and prolific chronicler of scientific wonders, astonishing optical illusions, space-exploration tidbits and just about anything else that tickles one's intellectual fancy.
Eric Rosenthal is a longtime observer and chronicler of issues, controversies, and trends in health care, especially in cancer, and was founder of the NCI-Designated Cancer Centers Public Affairs Network.
Although the great English chronicler of Rome's fall, Edward Gibbon, described a long process of decline followed by piecemeal disintegration, today's historians are skeptical of the idea of a slow decline.
Her ability to create work that ties in motifs and visual styles from multiple cultures made her a particularly astute chronicler of the diverse communities and cultural heritages of Los Angeles.
He is becoming to modern British TV what Charles Dickens was to the Victorian novel—a chronicler of the country's untold stories and social ills, and the domestic dramas that encapsulate them.
"I'm of two minds about whether he would be a loyalist or not," said WNYC political reporter Matt Katz, a longtime Christie chronicler who published a biography of the governor last year.
He is a stern and often sensationalist chronicler of the evil that men and women do to one another, and he tends to be as judgmental and retributive as the Old Testament.
On Saturday, the fashion world lost photographer Bill Cunningham, beloved chronicler of clothing via his "On the Street" column in The New York Times, where he effectively made street style a thing.
Many talented and independent writers — Varlam Shalamov (a fellow chronicler of the Gulag), Andrei Sinyavsky, Yuli Daniel and Joseph Brodsky — were circumventing the Soviet censorship with a new publication format called samizdat.
It is a fitting place to meet Min Jin Lee, a chronicler of the Korean diaspora whose encompassing yet intimate historical novel "Pachinko" is a finalist for this year's National Book Award.
And for the past century all of them, consciously or not, have been shaped to some degree by the work of John Reed, the legendary chronicler of Russia's October Revolution in 1917.
Gustavo Arellano, a longtime taco chronicler and author of the book "Taco U.S.A.," has found references to American businesses highlighting tacos or other Mexican foods on Tuesdays as far back as 1933.
Unsurprisingly, some of the keenest insight comes from Chris Ware, another chronicler of cartoon melancholy, who trains his expert eye on Schulz's craft, the spatial and rhythmic decisions that create his effects.
Paul Scully, Collingswood, N.J. RE: MIKE JUDGE Willy Staley profiled Mike Judge, the creator of "Idiocracy" and co-creator of "Silicon Valley," as America's foremost chronicler of its own self-destructive tendencies.
Guadalupe Loaeza, a well-known chronicler of the Mexican upper classes, remembers every detail of the time she interviewed him early on in the conflict in the EZLN headquarters of La Realidad.
From Stop Making Sense through last year's (excellent) Justin Timberlake Netflix film Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids, Demme proved himself an unparalleled chronicler of the unique energy that accompanies live music performance.
She is an exhaustive researcher, chronicler, and writer; the fully conceived, extensively worked out backstories she's created for her subjects give their poses of ennui, repose, or patrician melancholy a vast emotional range.
Eric Rosenthal has been a participant, observer and chronicler of the cancer community for more than three decades, and has been recognized for his contributions to providing insights into issues related to oncology.
His work spawned or influenced other uniform websites, like Threads of Our Game, which provides the history of baseball's uniform's from 22 to 2000, and Uni Watch, a chronicler of sports uniform trends.
" And Rudyard Kipling, no mean chronicler of animals himself, although he gave them human personalities, describes the progress of the great python Kaa, as he "seemed to pour his way across the ground.
Given Woodward's reputation -- as the preeminent chronicler of the modern White House -- and his long track record of fair and accurate reporting, the onus is on Trump to prove Woodward made major mistakes.
In a new book, "Word by Word", Kory Stamper, a lexicographer for Merriam-Webster, a reference-book publisher, duly carries on the tradition, reminding readers that a lexicographer is a chronicler, not a guardian.
In this episode, we chat with a chronicler of promoted tweets — the man behind the Promoted Tweets Twitter account — as well as an influencer who has used promoted tweets to boost his own brand.
David Goldblatt's first published photograph, taken near his home town west of Johannesburg in 1946 when he was about 16, has all the characteristics that would make him the most famous chronicler of apartheid.
That blood-smeared sequence suggests the influence of Sarah Kane, the poetic chronicler of human savagery whose plays of the 1990s (including "Blasted" and "Cleansed") proved that theater still had the power to shock.
Taking the powerful down a peg, from the head down, has often been a tool of the dispossessed, says the author Luc Sante, a chronicler of the street life of New York and Paris.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Sergei Loznitsa is a nimble chronicler of Soviet and post-Soviet society, making fiction and non-fiction films alike, often to the point where such neat distinctions blur.
Despite its frequent depictions of violence and extreme behavior, "Saul" is still TV's most obsessive chronicler of mundanity and tedium, a show in which cleaning up takeout containers is a significant declaration of love.
The Polish filmmaker Andrzej Wajda, who died at 90 in October, was a vigorous chronicler of his country's history, with an eye for complicated heroes — qualities on ample display in this career-spanning retrospective.
Daum insists that she is a feminist; Ellis for a long time struggled with his public identity as a gay man; and Yang made his name as an astute chronicler of Asian American life.
William, Duke of Normandy, just across the English Channel, reckoned that he was the rightful heir: according to William of Poitiers, a chronicler, Edward had said that he wanted the young William to succeed him.
The enigmatic jack-of-all-trades Billy Monk, who was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 27 and was shot to death in Cape Town in 1982, was one such unlikely chronicler of his age.
MAHASWETA DEVI, a Bengali writer who died on July 28th, was one of independent India's most moving and important writers, admired as much for her fiction as for being a fearless chronicler of social injustice.
J.M.W. Turner is probably one of England's most famous painters, who I had been taught to look at as a chronicler of the industrial age, but could also be considered a forefather of modern art.
Jacob Riis, a renowned chronicler of urban life at the turn of the 19th century, took photographs around New York City with his box camera to remind people of the cruelty of postindustrial working conditions.
When celebrated photographer Carol Highsmith, a chronicler of American life in the 21st century, began making her archives available to the Library of Congress, she did so with the intent of making the work royalty-free.
This week, Michael Daly, an astute chronicler of life in New York, weighed what the two potential opponents in the presidential election each had to say about how the Clintons wound up at a Trump wedding.
To Britons of a certain milieu, Mr. Trump is a bit grubby, a bit common, a bit — as Nancy Mitford, that chronicler of elite British life, would put it — "non-U," (that is, non-upper class).
"My friends who cover the White House say that the Obama administration was probably the most closed administration that they have ever tried to cover," said Sally Quinn, the longtime chronicler of Washington media and society.
" If you feel the need to do so, you should probably take your cue from Carl Schlesinger, a Linotype operator and the chief chronicler of The Times's composing room, who pronounced it, "AY-tan SHRID-lu.
He had first drawn wide acclaim after his 2004 book, "Sleeping by the Mississippi," and built a reputation as a skilled chronicler of American life in the tradition of photographers like Walker Evans and Robert Frank.
Observers on the left of the Democratic Party tend to paint these turns of events in rather dark, sometimes conspiratorial terms (Ryan Grim at the Intercept is the most skilled and persuasive chronicler of this viewpoint).
Louis C.K. has never settled for just making jokes about other people; he has built a career on being a chronicler of his own privilege, his own comfort, his own excess, his own perversion and poor behavior.
Perhaps the book marks a renaissance for Hujar, an opportunity to once again be whispered about as the ultimate outsider artist, an important queer chronicler of the 70s and 80s, and another brilliant talent lost to AIDS.
Out of a handful of unlikely-really unlikely-heroes, Lewis fashions a story as compelling and unusual as any of his earlier bestsellers, proving yet again that he is the finest and funniest chronicler of our time.
DeLillo, the most perceptive (almost occult) chronicler of contemporary life, has not invented the Convergence out of whole cloth: Its DNA comes from an old evangelism dressed in a new rhetoric and streaming out of Silicon Valley.
Collins, an enthusiastic chronicler of tennis who brightened the scene with his trademark bow-ties and colorful trousers, began his career at the Boston Globe in 1963 and became one of the sport's preeminent and foremost authorities.
Twitter locked out the operators of the popular Supreme Court online chronicler SCOTUSBlog on Monday, on the same day the court struck down Texas anti-abortion restrictions, probably because it mistakenly thought the account had gotten hacked.
A look at the work of Neil Simon over the decades reveals a prolific chronicler of New York City life who examined angst, romance and ambition through a comic lens, whether for the stage, film or television.
Linda Hirshman, who thanks the actor and activist Alyssa Milano for encouraging her to write "Reckoning: The Epic Battle Against Sexual Abuse and Harassment," isn't just a chronicler of the movement; she's an ardent participant in it.
An apparently loving husband, by all accounts close to his children, the king nonetheless found himself drawn into a relationship with a man that, in the words of one medieval chronicler, became a "indissoluble bond of love".
According to Shadia Drury, a chronicler of the intellectual roots of modern neoconservatism, Kojève's Hegelian teachings—which also strongly referenced the Nietzschean idea of the Superman—proved very influential in the development of postwar existentialism and postmodernism.
Through the trials and tribulations of Hebrew school and the thick pot smoke of Oberlin, Shteyngart survived and has become our chronicler of 21st-century absurdity as only an immigrant with a funny name can see it.
As Corinne Robins observed in a 1997 review, the seemingly inclusive chronicler and art historian, Irving Sandler, failed to mention "Ed Clark or any other artist of color" in his canonical book, The New York School (275).
Stephen Hackett, the co-founder of Relay FM, an independent podcast network where he also uploads his own podcast, and chronicler of Apple devices at his 512 Pixels blog, says he wants to see Apple prioritize internal expansion.
Iosseliani instantly proved himself as an uncommonly astute chronicler of everyday life, drawing from the comic rhythms of his native Georgia to great effect in such films as There Once Was a Singing Blackbird (1972) and Pastorale (1975).
Back then, residents called the area "little Paris" or, less optimistically, a "second-class Paris," said Brendan Freely, a historian and longtime chronicler of Istanbul life who has written a book about the neighborhood with his father, John.
"The decisions that are going to be made in Vienna are going to be more geopolitical this time than normal," said Dan Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Markit and a Pulitzer Prize-winning chronicler of the petroleum industry.
When the young British Parliament member Samuel Pepys began keeping a diary, little did he know that he would one day be considered an important chronicler of the 83th century and the inspiration of a dance theater work.
It's one of the most influential "You know, small towns are kind of corrupt on the inside!" movies ever made, and it marked Lynch as the surreal chronicler of America's darkest heart he'd always been destined to become.
With a few exceptions (think Lucian Freud and Alice Neel), the idea of the artist as a chronicler of one's tribe — whatever that group may be — has been scorned for being provincial, or old-fashioned, or not modernist.
His work was shown in the 203 exhibition in Mannheim, for which curator Gustav Friedrich Hartlaub coined the movement Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity), but Beckmann was never an overt a societal chronicler as peers Otto Dix and George Grosz.
Film Series The Polish filmmaker Andrzej Wajda, who died at 90 in October, was a vigorous chronicler of his country's history, with an eye for complicated heroes — qualities on ample display in this career-spanning retrospective, continuing through Thursday.
Suddenly, the world "forgot there was a football game going on," as Cowboys chronicler Joe Nick Patoski has put it — confirming what Tex Schramm, the Cowboys' president and general manager, had suspected: that a bolder, sexier look would create enormous buzz.
Putin is "obsessed with getting all kinds of dossiers and reports on a daily basis, from several kinds of secret services (FSB, FSO, SVR)," said Mikhail Zygar, a leading chronicler of Putin and the Kremlin's ruling elite, in an interview.
"Fight forgetfulness," Elie Wiesel, the late Holocaust survivor and chronicler of Nazi crimes, exhorted German youths at a conference in 1987 on what to do with the Wannsee Villa, the Berlin mansion where the "final solution" was adopted by Nazi officials.
But between those tantalizing flashes of the anarchic hell raiser, he comes across as a smart, articulate chronicler of his own history and a musician fully aware of his influences and proud of his place in the annals of rock.
"Finding Babel" follows Andrei Malaev-Babel, a Florida acting teacher, as he retraces the steps of his grandfather, Isaac Babel, the author of "Red Cavalry" and "The Odessa Tales" and a vivid chronicler of the early years of the Soviet Union.
SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah, Georgia, presents Jacob Lawrence: Lines of Influence, a group exhibition in two parts, commemorating the centennial of the birth of acclaimed painter, storyteller, educator, and chronicler of the mid-20th-century American experience, Jacob Lawrence.
Hadreas is still a chronicler of intense and difficult subject matter, but his music has never sounded more open and inviting, moving effortlessly from M20133-style blowouts to Enya-esque new age with not a single move sounding out of place.
And yet: After Laughter cements Williams as a chronicler of her generation in a way that most hope to be, making the anxiety of living and the necessity of acknowledging your own pain sound like a raucous, synth-laden good time.
Both styles, however different (Schad was an exquisite chronicler of Weimar decadence, while Wilde went after dreamlike, virtuosic mimesis and superficial shocks), were based in an optical examination of the real world, while Graham's work is undeniably a mental projection.
Mr. Halperin's role as a chronicler of the race between Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump also put him at the center of an election that was defined by intense debates over gender, power, and the consequences of sexual harassment.
That is the genius of Lana Del Rey, her essence as a chronicler of America in all its promises and failures: She takes something bigger and connects it back to her own life—while empowering us to do the same.
Beau Bridges plays Simon Kress, a government researcher who becomes so obsessed with some sentient alien insects that he discovers that he steals some samples, brings them back to his farm, and begins raising the creatures — becoming their chronicler, deity, and tormentor.
He ran for mayor (quixotic!), advertised for himself, had little use for feminism, and in between the Sturm und Drang evolved into a formidable nonfiction chronicler of protest (Armies of the Night), boxing (The Fight), and the criminal mind (The Executioner's Song).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads At once compassionate and angry, empathetic and satirical, tender and tough, Nicole Eisenman is a storyteller, portraitist, social chronicler, allegorist, fantasist, utopian dreamer and history painter, to name just a handful of her many artistic identities.
Open Book John O'Hara, the Pennsylvania-born chronicler of life in his home state and New York City in the middle of the 20th century, wrote novels and linked stories that were adapted into Hollywood hits ("Butterfield 8") and Broadway musicals ("Pal Joey").
One can take issue with how so many in the Arab world, and Anderson as their chronicler, make the linkages, but the article's insights into the anti-Americanism that is now so deeply ingrained are stunning and significant for the next U.S. administration.
Ken Kurson, a close friend of President Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, said on Wednesday that he will leave his job as editor of the Observer, the cheeky chronicler of New York City media and politics that Mr. Kushner purchased in 2006.
But as befits a lifelong collector, music obsessive, comics geek and dedicated chronicler of underground culture, there are also hand-drawn cartoons, New York 1970s ephemera and what is surely the largest cache of drawings of vomiting cats in any university collection.
Born in 1865 in Bombay, where his father taught at an arts school, and then exiled as a boy to England, he returned to India as a teen-ager, and quickly established himself as the great chronicler of the Anglo-Indian experience.
Shajarat Al-Durr (a Syrian chronicler calls her "the most cunning women of her age") began her path to power first as a bonded slave who married a sultan after giving him a son, and when he died, she ruled in his stead.
Mr. Cooper, a fifth-generation descendant of the early-19th-century herald of historical fiction, was the author of eight books, a longtime writer for The New Yorker and the droll chronicler of goings-on at the august Century Association's clubhouse in Midtown Manhattan.
She has been a chronicler and target of harassment online and in the physical world, and she was the romantic partner and friend of Aaron Swartz, the renowned coder and activist who committed suicide in the face of a federal investigation of his activities.
" Taking her husband's observations one step further, Madeleine Castaing, a frequent chronicler of the artist until her death at age 98 in 1992, bluntly claimed in a television miniseries, Montparnasse Revisited, that Soutine has all but "disappeared under the weight of legend and literature.
The New York Times's Peter Baker, chronicler of presidents, dropped this gem into an article not long after Trump finished talking: The president didn't even want to give that speech and he doesn't want to go on his upcoming trip to the Mexican border.
Roth was also, please remember, a devoted chronicler of the flawed, and so before rushing to censure him for misogyny or chauvinism or any other variety of insensitivity, we'd do well to spend this shiva week revisiting the history, or anti-history, of Socialist Realism.
But by persistently painting and reshaping himself in the same manner as the beautiful and stealthily subversive ceramics on which he first made his reputation, Mr. Perry, a 56-year-old married father of one, has also proved himself an astute chronicler of contemporary society.
As a social chronicler for The SoHo News and Details during the flowering of the city's hedonistic demimonde, Mr. Saban (SAY-ben), who died on June 26 at 72, was as influential in downtown circles as Liz Smith, the New York gossip institution, was uptown.
He supported himself as a photographer, and before long Abbott left his employ, set up a rival portrait studio on the Rue du Bac and surpassed him as a pictorial chronicler of James Joyce, André Gide and other members of the European avant-garde.
Bill Cunningham, the beloved chronicler of street fashion and a longtime photographer for The New York Times who died last year at 87, was known for circulating the city with his Biria bicycle and Nikon camera, often while wearing a blue French worker's jacket.
They likely once read to many as gutsy and authentic, but now they read to me as posturing: the boy pretending to be more bad-ass than he knows how to be, and the photographer posturing as the embedded, audacious chronicler of crusty, unconventional ways of being.
Jake Gyllenhaal has played his share of intense characters – a star-crossed cowboy in Brokeback Mountain, a streetwise LAPD officer in End of Watch, a cold-blooded crime-scene chronicler in Nightcrawler – but none was more fraught, or rewarding, than his breakout role in Donnie Darko.
And now, with The Florida Project — one of the most highly buzzed-about films at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, where it premiered in the Directors' Fortnight section — Baker's skill as a loving humanist chronicler of America's garish forgotten places has ripened into something truly marvelous.
The evening will include a screening of "Get Out of the Car" (2010), a short city symphony by cinematic chronicler of Los Angeles, Thom Andersen, who will introduce the film, as well as footage of riots and earthquakes captured by legendary helicopter pilot and journalist Zoey Tur.
"Maps that split country into zones of topography, climate, vegetation, and such things have much more neatly sweeping lines of demarcation than nature has usually been willing to go along with," wrote John Graves, Texas's beloved chronicler of land and lore, and that goes for people too.
I had already admired Levy for years — as a journalist, and a chronicler of human life in its oddity and yearning — and the essay lodged inside me in the way that truly moving writing burrows into your sense of the world and takes up residence for good.
McBride has said in interviews that season one of Vice Principals cribbed from John Hughes, the famous chronicler of high school life, but season two will be far more influenced by Brian De Palma, whose violence-ridden, blood-spattered films flirt, frequently, with tilting into outright exploitation.
Now, at the Morgan Library & Museum, along comes Peter Hujar: Speed of Life, a moving and elegiac survey of images by the American photographer Peter Hujar (1934-19803), a private, combative, and enigmatic figure (even to those who knew him) who notably became a chronicler of Manhattan's downtown scene.
Delving into fascinating territory the series could only touch on, Dominic Dunne -- Vanity Fair's chronicler of misdeeds among the rich and famous, and the father of actress and murder victim Dominque Dunne -- explores the bizarre side effects of the Simpson case in the gossipy world of the L.A. elite.
In 1988, when "Eastern Standard" first landed the playwright on Broadway, his characters would have been called yuppies, and Greenberg their foremost chronicler; since then, many theatergoers have taken to calling them — and Greenberg — "privileged," a word that the playwright himself avoids, even as it's become common American vernacular.
There are laughs, which become increasingly uncomfortable as … Let's just say that the turns of events won't surprise anyone familiar with this filmmaker, who, since his breakthrough in 1995 with "Welcome to the Dollhouse," has become an unflinching chronicler of suburban America, warts and all — but really, mostly warts.
Once she arrives in New York at 18, endlessly quotable and cheerfully decadent, she bounces like a cartoon cat through the columns of Walter Winchell and Dorothy Kilgallen and Earl Wilson, and ultimately finds her ideal chronicler and best friend in the future tabloid gossip queen Liz Smith.
And now Bob Woodward -- without question the preeminent political reporter and chronicler of the White House in the last four decades -- has written a book that confirms every bit of the portrayals we've seen about who Trump is, who he surrounds himself and how he conducts his business.
After poring over hours of grisly footage, Mr. Berg, who cites the work of Studs Terkel, fabled chronicler of the American Everyman, as a major influence, said he struggled mightily to make sense of the atrocity, and to understand how affected families found the energy to go on.
For many years, the Vanity Fair party was associated with the magazine's longtime editor Graydon Carter, who spent nearly a quarter-century styling himself not just as a chronicler of Hollywood's movie stars and moguls, but also as a part of their inner circle, before retiring last year.
As Ronald Brownstein, our most perspective chronicler of America's changing political demography, argued, the Republican Party and business community responded so sharply because they see what's coming: By 2020, the highly diverse Millennials will clearly pass the predominantly white baby boomers as the largest generation of eligible voters.
Philip Roth, the celebrated chronicler of Jewish and American life who died in Manhattan on Tuesday at age 85, took a different approach six years ago when he let it be known through the press that he had quit writing fiction — after more than 50 years of near-constant scribbling.
Not the author of "Mockingbird"—with whom anyone who picks it up will already be familiar—but Mr Flynt, an unmatched chronicler of moral gradations in a place where doing the right thing has been risky, and a man who, like the Atticus of "Mockingbird", was himself always on the right side.
Jane Austen — that most enduringly popular of early-19th-century writers, chronicler of domesticity and love — gets the star treatment yet again in new recordings of two of her most famous novels: SENSE AND SENSIBILITY, read by Rosamund Pike, and EMMA, read by Emma Thompson and a cast including Joanne Froggat and Morgana Robinson.
In Britain, she is a renowned and beloved essayist, historian, journalist and chronicler of places, the author of more than four dozen books, but it wasn't until her latest work, "In My Mind's Eye," was serialized on BBC radio last fall that many of her neighbors realized there was a celebrity in their midst.
The documentary filmmaker Wang Bing is a dogged chronicler of China's downtrodden: His "Tie Xi Qu: West of Tracks" was a nine-hour look at the decline of an urban industrial district, while "'Til Madness Do Us Part" offered a nearly four-hour immersion in a mental hospital that resembled a prison or a purgatory.
But this atmosphere was exactly what the French-born photographer Sylvain Couzinet-Jacques was looking for when he picked up stakes and moved to the town because of its name, and lived here for months to observe life and customs, like a 21884st-century update of Alexis de Tocqueville, the famous French chronicler of early 19th-century American life.
Ms. Wiazemsky, a granddaughter of the Nobel literature laureate François Mauriac, was a leading lady in Godard films as well as Mr. Godard's wife, a sometime muse and later a chronicler of his pioneering role in the New Wave, which swept France in the 21979s, fueled by the revolutionary stirrings that culminated in volatile strikes and demonstrations in 21980.
Embedding in a culture where the term "redneck" is used proudly, the documentary follows the family of Matthew Burns, who, with the nickname Video Pat, was a tireless chronicler of the off-road revelry at an Orlando-area mudhole — a site where locals would drive their trucks through the muck and engage in gone-wild-style partying.

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