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673 Sentences With "forebears"

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

Jacobsen's methods and procedures draw on the repertoire and mood not only of artistic forebears, such as the Situationist International, but also of poetic forebears, such as the French Oulipo group.
Architects are keen to avoid the mistakes of their forebears.
But as his name betrays, his forebears were mainly Spanish.
In this she has few true forebears in American cinema.
And, like their medieval forebears, they mean to crush it.
American citizens are the collective inheritors of their forebears' crimes.
And Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" airs alongside one of its forebears.
Our forebears evolved defenses against these pollutants, the scientists propose.
K. Rowling's magical inventions alongside their cultural and historical forebears.
Many Saudis revere the harsh life of the country's Bedouin forebears.
And this has to do with the intellectual forebears of Silicon Valley?
The festivities begin and guests drink, converse, and dance with their forebears.
They're buying far fewer cars than their forebears did, which worries carmakers.
Nationalists don't like to talk about the awful things their forebears did.
My forebears were brave refugees who found a home in this country.
Many, especially those whose forebears were educated at Presbyterian schools, are Christians.
And even those who are enrolled have worse plans than their forebears.
Most African Nova Scotians probably think their forebears made the better choice.
Hopefully, Lucy and Psyche live up to the successes of their forebears.
Not coincidentally, older Americans increasingly continue to work longer than their forebears.
Artists should stand on the shoulders of their forebears, not bury them.
It's a genuine catchall, in the mode of its forebears, but better.
Their forebears may have looked to the continent, and Rome, for spiritual succour.
And many families have forebears who were on opposing sides in the war.
But like their Parthian forebears, Iran and its allies have the upper hand.
And 5G networks will anyway be more expensive to build than their forebears.
But to make way for our white forebears, the native people were slaughtered.
In some ways, Bill Clinton wasn't behaving any differently than his presidential forebears.
Her widely cited forebears are Robert Fripp and Adrian Belew, of King Crimson .
They are unaffected by circumstance, blissfully oblivious to — or unconcerned with — their forebears.
Is there a reason that you should patronize them instead of their forebears?
The dictionary of people freed from the chains and cynicism of their forebears.
The series's forebears worked best because of the dynamics among a large ensemble.
These thematic grandchildren of the "Gilligan" misfits are noticeably raunchier than their forebears.
Before disappearing, however, they interbred with our forebears on at least several occasions.
Investors will hope that Mr. Culp can accomplish what his forebears could not.
" Mr. Kholi said; but if he doesn't, "we will curse his father's forebears.
The Shed sought out musicians who are thoroughly conscious of forebears and possibilities.
Survivors of World War II, Weitzmann's forebears had considered such a resurgence impossible.
But the photographs of her forebears were never published: Esquire killed the story.
Most are merely recollections from Mary Frances's deep past, and even her forebears'.
That's partly because of the sheer scale of our civil rights forebears' work.
Australian stars like Ken Rosewall and Evonne Goolagong, Barty's forebears, are prime examples.
This article cites "some of our forebears," including five presidents, defending free speech.
Far larger than his forebears, Kong looks as big as a mountain here.
As the offspring aged, they made the protein clumps that their forebears did.
These typically younger musicians pay respects to their forebears, albeit semi-ionically at times.
Antifa's forebears — anarchists, leftist unions, European Communists, and socialists — have been around for decades.
Take Roger Luna, a metal sheet worker who boasts of his Mexican immigrant forebears.
Their Western-led forebears can tell them how closely critics will monitor that promise.
He ranted against vacillating Western governments that lacked the muscle of their colonial forebears.
Of course, millennials may prove to be just as financially minded as their forebears.
But the brand-new cast members are what distinguish this movie from its forebears.
The modern human gets an edge over our ancient forebears with great fire starters.
Our female forebears instead evolved a new system: releasing eggs in a regular cycle.
My mother, 87, is a white woman whose forebears were English and Irish immigrants.
This aesthetic independence makes it clear that this game doesn't look like its forebears.
His childhood dream was to be a fur trapper, like his French-Canadian forebears.
Barclays took over J. and J.W. Pease, founded by his in-laws' forebears, in 1902.
Your forebears were considered human garbage on the streets of New York, Philadelphia and Boston.
Today's nomads retain a lifestyle relatively unchanged from that of their forebears in important ways.
Yet somehow, their debut feature doesn't just continue the decades-long legacy of its forebears.
For now, they are faring far better than their realist forebears first did at home.
What IDLES do differently to their punk forebears is reflect inwards and scrutinise their rage.
Like its forebears, The Dragon Prince has all the trappings of an enduring fantasy show.
The subjects are certainly given to a poetic wistfulness that those Romantic forebears might share.
And the English still succumb to newspaper-led moral panics, just as their forebears did.
The idea that the millennials are fundamentally different from their forebears is, I think, flawed.
If they realize that they are doing less well than their forebears, they become anxious.
From the January 2 premiere, season 21 The Bachelor has been sexier than its forebears.
And he thought of his forebears, like his great-grandmother, who was born a slave.
The third and final approach, whose intellectual forebears include Aristotle and Confucius, focuses on virtue.
While there were fellow narcissists among his forebears, was there a single nihilist like Trump?
Their forebears lived in Australia for perhaps 60,000 years before the British arrived in 1788.
Our nation's forebears knew these things, and each Republican senator ought to know them too.
I took out the wedding rings of all my treasured forebears and put them on.
An impressive debut showing, the seven-song LP makes clear nods to its screamo forebears.
It wants to echo forward to suggest we aren't that much better than our forebears.
At least no one is suggesting returning to the approach of some of our ancient forebears.
But modern capitalist societies may have something to learn from the ways of their ancient forebears.
But today's governments have done a worse job of learning from experience than did their forebears.
Yellen, like her forebears, chooses her words carefully knowing any hint of surprise can rattle markets.
But Jimmie can spiritually claim the city that belongs to his memory, his forebears, his friends.
Emulating the customs and heritage of their forebears is the Chinese way of paying them respect.
That resistance to readability is key to what separates Hull from his more figuratively inclined forebears.
What distinguishes these Capitals from their forebears is a dedication to structure, discipline and defensive accountability.
So their "knowledge, insights and vision" are different from those of their forebears, Mr. Wang said.
Zeus and Odin had to wage total war on their forebears to make way for man.
The dig exhumes the ghosts of Jamie's Neolithic forebears, and the local settlements reveal familiar rituals.
A parasite infecting the brains of some primates, including perhaps our forebears, may make them less wary.
Like their forebears on the steppes, they'll have only to reach for a tool to find it.
Their forebears opted for battle armor-like leather and spikes, or working class jeans and muscle shirts.
A youthful work, but one that in this company harked back to Mr. Salonen's brainily nutty forebears.
At present the city makes do with its traditional Volksparade, a tribute to its Dutch forebears' meticulousness.
Many of my paternal forebears were marked with an "M" or "Mu" for mulatto in census records.
Let's walk at our full height, honor the forebears, have a smile and for god's sake, floss.
It has often seemed to me that young women now deliberately avoid knowing much about their forebears.
And, like our muckraking forebears or Edward Snowden, the pure motives of truth-seeking called to us.
Younger generations are more diverse, less religious, and more directly impacted by economic inequality than their forebears.
The Texas Blythes love that story, because it evidences how uncertain were the lives of their forebears.
Q&A The monarchs that must trek southward skip reproduction and live far longer than their forebears.
After the split from this ancestor, our ancient forebears evolved into many different species, known as hominins.
Like his forebears, he synthesizes stylized representations, bright colors and mystical themes to create rich, evocative scenes.
Our forebears have spent centuries trying to build a government of laws, and not of hereditary bloodlines.
Then Iris Rogers did something her farmer forebears never had to do: She put up warning signs.
Inevitably, the question arises of how to evaluate the actions of forebears whose values society now condemns.
Ms. Yellen, like her forebears, chooses her words carefully, knowing any hint of surprise can rattle markets.
Both "Booksmart" and "Good Boys" are self-aware counterparts to many of their tween/teen movie forebears.
Any children fathered by our hybrid creature would be genetically mine; my parents would be the genetic forebears.
Our forebears helped build America's economy in the early 893th century and helped win the second world war.
"Giving all praise to our forebears, this is an opportunity to put some of those ghosts to rest."
Unlike its forebears, the G5 grew smaller rather than larger, and LG added features judiciously rather than gratuitously.
Boomer leaders (and their forebears) underinvested in long-term infrastructure and safety nets and economic and environmental rules.
Mr. Ty Song said he did not want to be too presumptuous in speculating about his forebears' desires.
If only some of my distant forebears had been wise enough to read this book to their kids.
As it grew in China, Uber avoided many of the mistakes made by of its American tech forebears.
Of course, paying explicit tribute to your heroes and forebears in album art is hardly a new idea.
She considers Ms. Bove's forays into big-footprint sculpture to be only superficially riffs on 20th-century forebears.
And when it does is when "Love Is Blind" most resembles its TV forebears in its juicy dramatizations.
But unlike some of his forebears, he says he takes no particular pride in the idea of whiteness.
Its aesthetic echoes forebears like Lynda Barry and Aline Kominsky-Crumb, yet its execution and vision are different.
Today's hanok, with its soot-black scalloped clay tiles laid atop wooden beams, resembles its 20143th-century forebears.
Echo and its ilk do, however, share a crucial trait with their imaginary forebears: They illuminate the times.
For our own sake, we must reclaim this history and remind ourselves of the sacrifices of our forebears.
And that's to say nothing of its many other cinematic forebears, many of which it just doesn't get.
Younger consumers are not as attached to cold cereal for breakfast as their forebears, analysts and cereal makers agree.
You and I paid for the rope at Abu Ghraib just as our forebears footed the bill for Gen.
An unusually rich trove found in Colorado reveals the world in which our mammalian forebears evolved into larger creatures.
The authorities have said Rohingya Muslims could apply for citizenship if they can show their forebears lived in Myanmar.
While the Spanish empire was at first a Castilian venture, Catalonia, too, provided viceroys and the forebears of presidents.
So, presumably, many Jews simply identified themselves by the country where they or their forebears had lived most recently.
Georgetown should instead set aside funds to reduce the tuition of all African-American students whose forebears were enslaved.
As more convention participants are added to the database, descendants will be able to learn about their forebears' achievements.
The authorities have said returnees could apply for citizenship if they can show their forebears have lived in Myanmar.
It's hard to imagine our feminist forebears seeing female dominance of the military-industrial complex as an unmixed blessing.
And we were eager to see how he held his own against his forebears, the heaviest hitters in the game.
The conversation turned to Europe 80 years ago, where many of their forebears had survived and not survived the Holocaust.
Children's Books Modern-day tastemakers, unlike their forebears, shower love on comics and graphic novels without a hint of condescension.
But, unlike its direct forebears, the V30 won't have a design-compromising second screen or a big and clunky footprint.
Modern royals are thus expected to behave with a certain decorum—although many of their forebears married glamorous young foreigners.
Along with the usual package of genes inherited from their forebears, bacteria also contain plasmids, small rings of additional DNA.
Unlike its forebears, the G5 grew smaller... Samsung had something to prove with last year's Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge.
The majority felt they owed it to their forebears from whom they had inherited the store to keep it going.
After Charlottesville, members including Culpepper blame white nationalists for unraveling their legacy, and confusing their message of honoring their forebears.
Intentionally or not, the GOP has effectively implemented the populist blueprint laid out by Irving Kristol and his philosophical forebears.
His research has shown that beans were domesticated twice: in Mesoamerica, where their wild forebears evolved, and in the Andes.
In the spirit of these forebears, in 28 Reicher and some fellow-Ledyardians embarked on an expedition of their own.
It also has slightly better video quality than its forebears, though I don't think anyone will buy it for that.
Though their closest sonic foil was, fittingly, Hey Mercedes, other Midwestern bands were beginning to show respect to their forebears.
But, as some Venetian Jews have argued, most of their forebears were not outsiders (some arrived in the 14th century).
Samuel Ferguson (the excellent C. Mingo Long), son of a slave, reminds Liberty that his forebears didn't immigrate by choice.
In search of the president's forebears, the author embarked on a three-week journey through Europe, from Scotland to Slovenia.
What also sets Facebook and Google apart from their direct-marketing forebears is that they give access to everyday advertisers.
Even before there were Homo sapiens, then, our distant forebears had a mix of genes for light and dark skin.
The insanity defense has been part of the American judicial system from its founding, carried over from our English forebears.
He pointed fingers elsewhere, excusing his own erotic exploits by insinuating that his Oval Office forebears were no less randy.
We hope you enjoy a little R&R as we honor our forebears with Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples Day.
Scientists have not found fossils of the snake family's four-legged ancestors, though they are certain these tetrapod forebears existed.
Her books tend to wink gently at their forebears, which Rooney seems to consider both deeply important and humiliatingly trivial.
Others lost their connection to the cemetery and their forebears — or simply couldn't find their loved ones beneath the foliage.
The shaky assumption behind such chronocentrism is that we have advanced beyond our forebears to a state of relative enlightenment.
But whereas his forebears carried whiteness like an ancestral talisman, Trump cracked the glowing amulet open, releasing its eldritch energies.
But in relative terms, they have far lower status than their intellectual forebears of 20 or even 10 years ago.
Since inheriting power after his father's death in 2011, he has proved as Machiavellian as his forebears of the totalitarian dynasty.
Today's younger buyers, loosely referred to as Generation Y, have embraced a term that would have turned off their immediate forebears.
It's no coincidence that Tool's proggiest output came out the year they toured with some of the genre's forebears, King Crimson.
Unlike their forebears in Nixon's time, the argument goes, today's Republicans are spineless and unprincipled, putting politics ahead of their country.
Fernando Nuñez, a percussionist, lives in the same house that his forebears, freed African slaves, moved into way back in 1837.
Yet even then, a chief executive's natural inclination to preserve the legacy of his forebears runs against the logic of focus.
The contrast between this "neo" liberalism and its political and economic forebears can best be understood in terms of three distinctions.
His perspicacity in the field of genius-level prose makes Amis highly qualified to analyze the mechanics of his beloved forebears.
Today's educated liberals lack the courage they admire in their forebears, at a time when it is needed more than ever.
The current upswell has been built on this granite foundation: Jazz musicians are nothing if not self-conscious about their forebears.
The easiest comparison that comes to mind when reading Malka Older's INFOMOCRACY (Tor/Tom Doherty, $24.99) is to its cyberpunk forebears.
"They are joyful and not too exhausted," de Rougé wrote, describing the American liberators as his forebears might have seen them.
Barnett's narrative sensibility is wry, but, unlike so many of her indie-rock forebears, she isn't out to antagonize her listeners.
Consider some of Jean-Raymond's and Pyer Moss's forebears and contemporaries: Sean Combs's Sean John, Kanye West's Yeezy or Rihanna's Fenty.
And the concert was also to include Sebastian Currier's new "Ghost Trio," which riffs on themes of influence and musical forebears.
Centered on a group of gay men in New York today, "The Inheritance" asks what a generation owes to its forebears.
Still, these early women are archetypes rather than individuals, closer to the mythic figures of Corot's Neo-Classical and Romantic forebears.
The way our forebears responded to that crisis might be of interest now as the city deals with the coronavirus onslaught.
According to the proprietor, his forebears started the stroopwafel recipe here and many have imitated it, but never have come close.
Rock's current establishment is more conscious than any other of music's underrecognized forebears — namely of unsung blues and R&B artists.
So with just four weeks to go until the first preview, he ignored the naughtily named snacks and invoked his forebears.
Before the Los Angeles Lakers became an N.B.A. glamour team, their forebears dominated pro basketball far from the flash of Hollywood.
Abdullah Azam Khan, the SP candidate, is from a rival clan whose forebears are said to have worked in the royal stables.
Newspaper ads beseech customers to shake off the yoke of multinational firms in the way their forebears resisted Britain's East India Company.
Like many younger joikers, he accompanied himself on the piano—a practice unknown to his forebears even after keyboard instruments were invented.
By then the activists will probably be crawling over the digital cockroaches, who will resist break-ups—just like their industrial forebears.
For many former progressives, the war crushed any hope that modern humanity would prove to be gentler and wiser than its forebears.
Unlike the work of some of her forebears at Darmstadt and Ircam, hers is far from propagandistic, or designed purely to shock.
He's integrating lab-grown neurons onto computer chips in an effort to make them much more powerful than their standard silicon forebears.
It draws as much from the surgeon artist, Lucio Fontana, as it does feminist forebears, Marisa Merz, Louise Bourgeois, and Ana Mendieta.
The Mormons of Utah, and who may very well be some of Duke's forebears from Beaver County, Utah, kept impeccable genealogy records.
Compilations of folklore, tales of illustrious forebears, genealogies of language and theories of race were all put to work bolstering these identities.
But the tools which forged nations in the 19th century—forebears, symbols, cultural achievements—look unacceptably clumsy when used by Brussels today.
"These were real people," Ms. Bayonne-Johnson said of her enslaved forebears, "and I wanted to put faces on them for him."
Whatever sociologists may say about football as a cult, many people alive today are not religious in the way their forebears were.
They say its route traverses ancestral lands — which are not part of the reservation — where their forebears hunted, fished and were buried.
Critically, the majority of these Latinos are citizens, people whose forebears were in the country long before mine schlepped through Ellis Island.
Later studies showed that the forebears of modern humans first encountered Neanderthals after expanding out of Africa more than 50,000 years ago.
And if he can keep to FCA's pledge not to shut plants, Elkann might yet become an Italian legend like his forebears.
The fewer calories our forebears had to expend on days when they hunted, the less food they would need to bring down.
But in Rage's efforts to distill the spirit of forebears as dissimilar as EPMD and Bruce Springsteen, they perfected a novel sound.
Arts & Leisure ___ In search of the president's forebears, the author embarked on a three-week journey through Europe, from Scotland to Slovenia.
But others, including those whose forebears were targeted by racial covenants, say it's time for the insidious language to vanish for good.
Prince and David Bowie are obvious influences, but so too are rock 'n' roll forebears like the Beatles and the Beach Boys.
We are proud of the forebears who faced tough odds to get here, even if we had nothing to do with it.
Their forebears negotiated tête-à-tête with buyers in Les Halles, a pen behind their ears to mark up orders and ledgers.
The restaurant's name refers to Ms. Silverton's forebears, who were cattle ranchers in Saskatchewan, Canada, at the turn of the 20th century.
Maybe, building on the ideas of her forebears, Perry is proposing evilness as a way of gaming a system that's already corrupt.
The kicks are aptly named Floatride Space Boot SB-01, as their lightweight design is a much-needed upgrade from their clunky forebears.
At their most candid, some Democrats echo their pragmatist forebears in emphasizing the unromantic exigencies of elections and the political inevitability of mammon.
During the breakdown of the '70s, families with means fled to the suburbs in even greater numbers than their '50s and '60s forebears.
But the "Constantinopolitans", led by some distinguished French families whose forebears came from Russia three or four generations back, still hold their own.
Some Mesozoic predators were nocturnal as well, but our tiny forebears became better evolved for seeing, hearing, hunting, and foraging in the dark.
As a student of American history, I find Mr. Trump's actions to be both unprecedented and irreconcilable with the spirit of our forebears.
If the new generation were really waging war on their forebears' way of life, I doubt they'd start with the disposable table settings.
But the 2016 Republican nominee's participation in this time-honoured tradition differs from the gripes of his forebears in both degree and tone.
Wood was born near Liverpool in 1901, to a doctor father and a mother whose Cornish forebears included admirals in the Royal Navy.
In Britain, that is perhaps because of nostalgia for distant days when imperial forebears ranked high on the league tables of global influence.
Like its forebears, the new model appears to be simply a stylish watch, but it can record my walks, runs, swims, and snoozes.
Like her Victorian forebears, Atwood does not shy away from the idea that the novel is a place to explore questions of morality.
As one of grindcore's forebears, Napalm Death was pegged as the world's most extreme band before they even nailed down a stable lineup.
For Muslim women, it provides an empowering and exhilarating genealogy of strong forebears whom they can connect to their contemporary journeys of empowerment.
Thirteen million blacks, many of whose forebears had been dispossessed in 1913, held the remaining 14 percent, much of it poor-quality land.
Members of this special generation eat more and live longer, up to nine months, compared with two to five weeks for their forebears.
In their research, Pixar filmmakers made trips to Mexico and embedded with families to observe the ways they paid tribute to their forebears.
Trees were cut for fuel and timber, then terraced so farmers like Mr. Castellnou's forebears could plant whatever would fetch the most money.
This includes Florida forebears, a Swiss boarding school education, Smith College, forays into the theater and fiction writing and then marriage and motherhood.
Proponents of the wealth test often say their immigrant forebears didn't depend on cash assistance for needy families, rental assistance or food stamps.
Today, there are many dozens smaller ones that have proven harder to control and far more aggressive than most of their larger forebears.
"Excitingly, this paper reports how plants fill in the missing links of telomerase RNA's eventful evolutionary history ... from our simplest forebears," Blackburn said.
Our ancient forebears stumbled on a liberating solution: Make yourself into a watering can, and you can lay your eggs wherever you want.
Abe's government has affirmed past official apologies over the war but said future generations should not be burdened by the sins of their forebears.
The revelations are the latest in a series of discoveries of entanglements with the Nazis of the forebears of owners of large German businesses.
Were Europe ever to be plunged into darkness, I could pack my bag as my forebears did before me, and make that final flight.
One of their forebears' lessons is that shocking the public into changing its mind may not be achieved in a year or even ten.
Trying to sort through these hard questions enables us to have empathy, or the ability to put ourselves in the shoes of our forebears.
Millennial evangelicals They've grown up in the shadow of old guard evangelicals, but they're more attuned to the country's religious pluralism than their forebears.
Many members of Turkey's Alevi community, whose faith draws from Shi'ite, Sufi and Anatolian traditions, say Selim slaughtered tens of thousands of their forebears.
It's more than fitting that his testimonial to benevolent parentage echoes Stevie Wonder in vocal gusto and instrumental tones; Mr. Lidell knows his forebears.
Earlier studies had hinted at the possibility that the forebears of modern humans had multiple encounters with Neanderthals, but hard data had been lacking.
Spare a moment to consider the FinFishers and Hacking Teams of the world, the forebears of a multi-million dollar market for government spyware.
As of 2012, we were also spending 18 percent more on luxury goods than our yuppie boomer forebears, according to one American Express survey.
Among our pre-mammalian forebears, an offspring's sex was dictated as it is today in crocodiles and turtles: not by genetics, but by temperature.
Like many fellow seekers, Wagner starts her ancestral quest when she learns that one of her forebears might not have been what he seemed.
In this sense, Jackson's work is less an anticipation of second-wave feminism than a conversation with her female forebears in the gothic tradition.
Among the many, many issues our forebears didn't worry about were the deterrent effects of capital punishment and the ideal attributes of a firefighter.
Then, with plenty of humor and can-do practicality, she rewrote every step to clarify those opaque instructions our homemaking forebears took for granted.
Like a Biblical scholar ticking off Old Testament lineage, she typed out a list of her forebears—enslaved and free—going back seven generations.
Wheeler, the 30-year-old son of California commune dwellers, draws and writes in the same caustic, kooky and endearing style of his '60s forebears.
They say it reminds them of dark eras in European history when their forebears were threatened with death or expulsion unless they converted to Christianity.
The law the government is eagerly enforcing requires all residents to prove that they or their forebears were in the state by March 24th 1971.
And they use those profits to invest in public healthcare, schools, and elder care, ensuring that the next generation will have more than their forebears.
As it moves further into this sphere, one of the few remaining distinctions between Europe's low-cost carriers and their full-service forebears will disappear.
The stories are straightforward adventure, but what makes Wells's "new pulp" feel fresh is its refusal to take the easier storytelling routes of its forebears.
Like their Redeemer forebears, today's Democratic diagnosticians of the Trumpist malaise typically traffic in misleading euphemisms that naturalize a wider politics of unexamined race privilege.
Artists like Z-Ro, Pimp C, and Boosie Badazz are just a handful of artists who can be counted as Future's forebears in this regard.
Unlike some of her famous forebears among Hudson River Valley artists, who were more likely to use a paintbrush, Ms. Bhabha was wielding an ax.
Heigl didn't get to show the luminance, flintiness or idiosyncrasy of her romantic-comedy forebears; she was given too few moments of wit or insight.
But he knew that his Navy future would be limited by his physical disabilities, and that he would never be an admiral like his forebears.
For example, many blacks and whites whose families have long claimed that some of their forebears were Native American dismiss DNA reports that say otherwise.
A proud product of hip-hop's birthplace, this Bronx-based rapper, born Jennifer Roberts, honors her forebears even as she charts her own path forward.
For ten generations, her forebears had struggled to scratch from the earth enough to eat, and now finally in her generation there was dizzying progress.
His father was the eminent pianist Rudolf Serkin; his maternal grandfather was the influential conductor and violinist Adolf Busch, whose musical forebears went back generations.
Many of us in the developed world have easier lives than our forebears had: There is less arduous labor; there is less labor in general.
He rehabilitates Neanderthals from subhumans (based on racist and ethnocentric Victorian values) to individuals capable of symbolic thought and social relations not unlike our forebears.
The upstart social network, which became the most downloaded app in the U.S. in 2018, argues that it stands apart from those more established forebears.
The Abe administration has affirmed past government apologies but asserts that future generations should not have to apologize for the wartime sins of their forebears.
But we've compiled a playlist of songs that are patriotic in their own way, from today's most exciting activist-musicians plus a few of their forebears.
Just like Iraq, Syria hosts an array of Christian confessions, distinguished by the positions their forebears took in church councils of up to 15 centuries ago.
Journalists still cling to the generalist model of our forebears, rather than becoming specialists on a beat where they can offer deeper insights and original reporting.
The lyricism of Natia's forebears remains, but there are hooks and verses with cadences and melodies that feel as fresh as they do distinctly west coast.
Before he can land once again in the Underworld, Kratos is saved by Gaia, a Titan and one of the forebears of the gods of Olympus.
Oscar-winning director Barry Jenkins' adaptation brings Baldwin's story to life using a visual language that's steeped in his photographic forebears, Gordon Parks and Roy DeCarava.
And it will be interesting to see how the work will affect a new generation whose global vision is less restricted than that of its forebears.
Ms. Eisenman's most ambitious works consist of large-scale street scenes crowded with figures and intimations of her Expressionist forebears, especially James Ensor and Edvard Munch.
His forebears were farmers and more recently factory workers, but he attends the "best" school in the city (meaning it gets the highest university entrance scores).
And thus we have become film stars, a far cry from the marginalized outcasts that our obit-writing forebears in newsrooms across America so often were.
Boygenius has forebears in country music: the powerhouse trio of Miranda Lambert , Ashley Monroe, and Angaleena Presley released their third album as Pistol Annies this month.
Another way of saying all this is that, while our forebears looked confidently to the text of the Aeneid for answers, today it raises troubling questions.
But with the emergence of species like Homo erectus, hominins grew to about our current height, with brains twice as large as those of their forebears.
He would broach no rival to his own authority, and in that sense he was a socialist in a rather less democratic mould than his forebears.
Like Eisenman, the six painters in On Painting reiterate the influence of their forebears, the pleasures of a chosen medium, and a larger connection to mankind.
"It would fall to a new generation of Americans, reckoning what their forebears had wrought, to fathom the depths of the doom-black sea," she writes.
And when he talked to potential voters about his parents' journey to the United States, people often recalled their forebears' struggles upon arriving at Ellis Island.
They are still practicing in the mold of their forebears, servicing community members in their towns from birth to grave, with house calls not unheard-of.
This annual series focuses on the best of recent Italian moviemaking, but the lineup also pays tribute to forebears, like the brothers Paolo and Vittorio Taviani.
For people like me who have shed our meat-eating ways, going back to the largely plant-based diet of our forebears has brought only benefits.
The Wizards and their forebears — the Baltimore Bullets, the Capital Bullets and the Washington Bullets — have not been asked to go the distance nearly as often.
The postmodern era left us despondent and skeptical, prone to toy idly with old forms and make fun of the idiocy of some of our forebears.
Because this work is so conceptually specific, its forebears are all the more easily recognized, and there is more consequence in failing to acknowledge these predecessors.
Until that point, they'd been praised for their agility, refined technique and teamwork in crew competitions, yet often deemed too derivative of their B-Boy forebears.
Above all, says Mr Dodd, the historian of Winston County, the descendants of Alabama's yeoman farmers are, like their forebears, "tired of people looking down on them".
The same engineer, Hiroyasu Suzuki, who developed the M50 and M50x was tasked with creating a matching wireless version that sounds the same as its wired forebears.
What's clear is that unlike our physically-active forebears, many modern humans now spend an inordinate amount of time sitting each day—and that's not necessarily voluntary.
Many fans want younger bands to pay homage to what came before, write about the same subjects as their forebears, and avoid trying to reinvent the wheel.
But the younger Mr Yadav is personally popular, and his newfound friendship with Mr Gandhi, whose forebears are somewhat more illustrious, gives their alliance a respectable look.
If you ask us, it's hard not to feel listless and lazy when the temperatures are pushing 90 degrees, but who are we to judge our forebears?
Arabs give one of two contradictory answers: "because we have strayed from the path of our righteous forebears" or "because we have failed to embrace Western modernity".
The authors argue that T. amplectus was more closely related to aquatic lizards, and that these snake-like forebears evolved their long bodies for eel-like swimming.
The group date, stinky with Krystal drama, consumes the episode a bit, which is a shame because the one-on-ones were more illuminating than their forebears.
Its more established forebears - cryotherapy chambers which use liquid nitrogen to achieve the same freezing temperatures – have been around since launching in Japan in the late 1970s.
Just like modern mammals, our scaly, toothy forebears had a monopoly on the large-bodied ecological niches of the day: big plant-eaters, big omnivores, big carnivores.
As a younger generation organizes social movements to remedy injustices and improve their world, they may wish to turn to such examples from their Generation X forebears.
The Fujimoris, whose forebears migrated from Japan, have said they are the victims of political persecution, but have not provided any evidence to back up the claim.
This is something the older generations cannot accept, just like their forebears could not accept the tumult of the sixties, when the baby boomers disconnected from them.
Unlike its forebears, though, this industrial robot isn't confined to a cage: Most factory robots work in enforced solitude to make sure their human colleagues stay safe.
Undergirding our understanding of history is a belief that if we had been present, we would have done things differently—been more outspoken, braver, than our forebears.
The tsars' successors, the Soviets, proclaimed lofty ideals but in governing such a vast land they, too, became consumed by the tyrannic paranoia that plagued their forebears.
Others have leaned into the situation, aiming to build households that, like their forebears, are bound with ties other than the traditional ones of family or romance.
The Vatican loosened its stance on the matter in the late 1960s by suggesting contraception wasn't the "intrinsically evil" practice Catholic forebears made it out to be.
Early on, the artist inherited an appreciation for the traditional customs, strong beliefs, and imaginative stories that her Eastern European forebears passed down by word of mouth.
And whether our forebears were strangers who crossed the Atlantic, or the Pacific, or the Rio Grande, we are here only because this country welcomed them in.
Those rising sea levels wiped out the first iteration of the flightless rail, which was descended from flying forebears that originated in the Seychelles Islands and Madagascar.
Yet while new applications of scientific knowledge definitely affect the way art is produced, Wys believes that today's artists themselves share much in common with their forebears.
He pointed to revelations that many Hispanics here have forebears who were Genízaros, Native American slaves sold to Hispanic families from the 16th to the 19th centuries.
Before supporting their indie-rock forebears Superchunk at two New York shows next week, Swearin' will play a one-off headlining set at this Brooklyn D.I.Y. venue.
New York became the epicenter of American diversity and trade thanks in part to features it inherited from its Dutch forebears, including the principle of religious toleration.
For Mr. Ray, sculptural invention takes the form of an excessive perfectionism, in which new scanning and casting technologies permit thrillingly off-key riffs on ancient forebears.
"I'm a secessionist because the federal government is anti-Christian and we're different culturally," explained Mr. Randall, a retired heavy equipment operator whose forebears include Confederate veterans.
The Montier family portraits, Shaw said, show exemplary African American forebears in a style almost reminiscent of 'Founding Father' portraits by Gilbert Stuart or John Singleton Copley.
This year, the grandmasters were members of the Nally family, who have been in Kings Park for six generations, since their forebears immigrated from Ireland around 21781.
But Mr. Kim has also appeared to project a different image from his forebears, showing no qualms about admitting to the failures of his country's economic policies.
Now as an adult, I understand her urge to know more about her roots and lament the fact that I don't speak the languages of my forebears.
Their faith was born in New York state, in 1830; their forebears moved westward over the subsequent years as they became highly unpopular in one place after another.
He was a "populist" of sorts, defending good, hard-working (white) Christian Americans, but his enemies were not the economic bankers and monopolists of his 19th-century forebears.
And a team of paleontologists has uncovered a trove of thousands of fossils in Colorado that shows the world in which our mammalian forebears evolved into larger creatures.
Its main rival is the People's Progressive Party (PPP), which is dominated by Guyanese of Indian origin, whose forebears came as indentured workers on the country's sugar plantations.
Her family forebears include migrants from Slovenia, a mineworker who slogged away in north Minnesota, a school teacher and a local journalist (her father, who was an alcoholic).
The biblical creation story posits that our forebears were inherently pure and peaceful and only fell into nasty struggles for dominance with the knowledge of the forbidden fruit.
When George Washington was president, our forebears did not wonder what spurred his occasional ghostwriter, Alexander Hamilton, to make a particular argument in the general's 1796 farewell address.
But at the heart of the show and so many of its forebears is the anxiety and absurdity that comes with living in a seemingly ordinary American town.
Since one of Mr Johnson's forebears was Turkish, are we to dismiss his antipathy to the EU as being motivated by the fact that he is "part-Turkish"?
White dwarfs are the raw exposed cores left in the ashes of these pyrotechnic events, and they are much more stable and long-lived than their stellar forebears.
The innocent and the young, the forebears of our future, lie in wait of some emancipation from their feral prison-neighborhoods, which are the only homes they have.
But, as programmed by the Takacs, it came off as a young Viennese composer's homage to his forebears, like the second work, Schubert's String Quintet in C (1828).
In this call to arms, Sitaraman excels in "helping understand how our forebears handled it and building a platform to think about it today," Angus Deaton wrote here.
In some ways, the debate echoes conversations about the kinds of responsibility white Americans should have for slavery or acts of racist violence committed by long-dead forebears.
"But maybe it starts here," with not listening to our hearts and following in the footsteps of our forebears and heading out, whenever we can, for a walk.
It was only at the end of the last century that descendants of the dead who fought for the losing Republican side began to search for their forebears.
The walls are crowded with portraits of pompous-looking men in uniforms, the forebears of the princess's husband, the field marshal, who is away for a military campaign.
Victoria's forebears, as well as the revolutionary spirit in Europe, left a bad taste in the mouths of the British people with respect to the value of monarchy.
As much as their personal relationships, it is the family cemetery that binds the descendants — not merely to honor and remember their forebears but also for tax reasons.
Virginia (23-10) advances to play the Florida-East Tennessee State winner on Saturday, while U.N.C.-Wilmington, like so many of its forebears, heads home after one game.
Its forebears, the Mizrahi and National Religious parties, emerged when the state was founded as the political home for religious Zionists, a relatively powerless minority at the time.
Billy's sermon was a pitch-perfect blend of humor — "we feel the presence of the orange one's home" — and earnest invocation of the forebears of politically engaged art.
Like Thomas Lake Harris and Cyrus Teed, two of his forebears in American messianic thought, he sees a new race evolving to supplant the old "corruptible," decadent, miserable humanity.
We find ourselves lodged in old questions of determinism and free will, both bound to repeat the pain of our forebears and grasping at the possibility of transcending it.
Most Japanese RPGs today look very different from their forebears, utilizing flashy animated cutscenes, voice acting, and combat that feels more like an action game than a classic JRPG.
The wealth and income of all of us has far more to do with the efforts and achievements of our collective forebears than with anything we do for ourselves.
Knut and his forebears have each integrated into European society, albeit only somewhat successfully ("Minorities are fabulous!" a woman says to Knut's grandmother on a train to West Berlin).
FOR 20143 YEARS, says a founding myth common to Turkic peoples from China to the Aegean sea, forebears of the Turks were trapped in the rocky valley of Ergenekon.
Fine Gael, a centre-right party whose forebears backed the 1921 accord, has just lost control of the legislature after an election in which its vote slumped to 25.5%.
Michael Phelps recently reminded us of this when he broke a 2,100-year old record for the most individual Olympic titles, held previously by one of his Rhodes forebears.
They wonder how their families, their own lives and their homeland might have developed differently if their forebears, many of them unskilled and illiterate, had been rejected by America.
Their forebears, possibly merchants from Persia, settled in Kaifeng when it was the vibrant capital of the Northern Song dynasty and built a synagogue here in the 12th century.
She had accepted our slave trading forebears as yet another facet of the complex legacy she carries, but she did chide me for naming her after a slave port.
As in the last movie, Bryce Dallas Howard is likable but plays an oddly uncharismatic character, especially when you consider that her forebears are Laura Dern and Julianne Moore.
The Baby Boomers were fully in control of pro wrestling, and their tastes slowly squeezed out or altered their forebears' often austere notions of what the form should be.
Others, like the indestructible tardigrades (or water bears), have done away with the complex rubric of nerve fibers found in their Cambrian forebears, in favor of more minimalistic systems.
We were given half-portions of each, and after scarfing down the chicken version (I did it for my cave-dwelling forebears!), I could barely pick at the meatball.
Though its members sing a different tune from their Greek forebears — with soaring gospel strains that make the rafters tremble — they remain somber, celebratory and essential to listen to.
Written over a two-year period when she was critically depressed, this collection considers her relationship to English and her literary forebears, and explores two central questions: Why write?
His neglect of historical forebears and his almost exclusive focus on the personal is indicative of a generational shift in Asian-American thinking; revolution is not very fashionable today.
Dr. Stager believed that by condemning the worship of calf deities, the early Israelites were seeking to purge their forebears' Canaanite influence and establish themselves as a separate people.
She considers what Woolf called "Pattledom," the family of her formidable Anglo-Indian forebears on her mother's side, separately from the family of Minny Thackeray, her father's first wife.
We who speak contemporary English are so reliant on word order that we are no longer as able as our forebears to create lyrical, associative, figurative meaning in poetry.
Artistic situations of Dada gazing, such as with Höch, offer a different view on genealogy and a different idea of the relationship between forebears and posterity, progenitors, and descendants.
Today's economic analysis of migration is much more nuanced and less racist than its forebears, but it is also significantly out of step with public opinion, especially in Europe.
Again, some of those projects — like 2015's Childhood's End, a miniseries version of the great Arthur C. Clarke novel — struggled to attain the weight of their literary forebears.
Salvatore Palazzolo, a retired postman and student at Mr Di Mauro's rabbinical school, says he had his first intuitive feelings about his forebears' past when he was eight or nine.
In particular, he uses his films to explore the way their forebears treated violence, and the ways in which fans of those films would fetishize on-screen blood and guts.
As the pop-punk phenoms were clearly versed in bands like Saves The Day, their tribute to their Philadelphia forebears helped give them some credibility with those that questioned them.
Instead of using hallucinogens to achieve higher states of consciousness like their '60s forebears, Bliss Ninnies focus on ecstatic dancing, meditating, chanting, and vegan eating as paths to spiritual enlightenment.
That's another way in which Juul has followed in the footsteps of its forebears: California plaintiffs and Massachusetts' attorney general have accused the company of targeting teens with its ads.
Where she's similar to her NXT forebears is that they, too, were dominant, genre-changing performers with the weight of hype and history—or, at least, NXT history—behind them.
RVNG's FRKWYS series—which pairs young boundary-pushers with their experimental forebears—unites the Portland-based duo Visible Cloaks with Japanese ambient legends yoshio Ojima and Satsuki Shibano on Serenitatem.
Olympus, Canon, Nikon, and Fujifilm have all spent the last few years drawing from their long camera legacies to to make their newest digital cameras look like their film forebears.
To honor my forebears, my husband and I named our only child Bristol, after the town in Rhode Island where some of the Faleses first settled in the 17th century.
Her insights are sharp, and her engaging intelligence is a welcome guide, but as the memoir proceeds, her distinctive voice grows fainter, drowned out by the clamor of her forebears.
Yet by breaking with Mr. Trump on constitutional grounds, Mr. Taft is not a Taftian turncoat, but is rather harking back to his forebears' roots in the party of Lincoln.
Last year, a remix compilation called "Funkadelic Reworked by Detroiters" allowed such dance producers as Moodymann and Underground Resistance to show gratitude to their forebears for all those transcendent rhythms.
In some respects the 21st-century witch — someone who is one because others insist she is, not because she identifies as a Wiccan priestess — closely resembles her early American forebears.
The Abe administration has affirmed past government apologies for Japanese actions during the war, but asserts that future generations should not have to apologize for the actions of their forebears.
There is a discrepancy between the emotion of the exclamation point and the emotion on the faces of the descendants, some of whom look even more uncertain than their forebears.
My Aussie/Irish convict forebears would have been proud at my still intact convict sense of justice and bonhomie for a fellow motley straggler in this thing we called life.
Androgyny cozied up to cheeky intellectualism, and in a slightly off-kilter palette: an announcement of his willingness to play with color more daringly than his forebears at Gucci had.
Thomas might have followed his forebears into the teaching side of the game if not for the serendipitous arrival of the P.G.A. Championship to his hometown, Louisville, Ky., in 2000.
Their forebears include the prim supermarket manager Mr. Whipple, on the lookout for customers with the temerity to squeeze the Charmin (though, of course, he couldn't resist the temptation himself).
Even then it was usually only to sing the praises of his forebears or the talented craftsmen and designers who had worked for him, while playing down his own talents.
He later starred in presidential campaign commercials for his uncle George W. As early as 2003, George P. hinted at future political ambitions, following the precise playbook of his forebears.
Rather than adorning cadences with excessive filigree like his Baroque forebears, the plodding heaviness of Schubert's trill stops the piece dead in its tracks before allowing the dainty melody to resume.
But the cardinal follows the church's line in advocating a liberal and humane immigration policy, and in deploring selfish "nativism" among Americans whose recent forebears were members of struggling ethnic minorities.
In Amager, there is only one Chili's and though it shares a logo with its American forebears (a jaunty pepper over the 'i') it is rather more broadminded in its offerings.
JONATHAN MOORELondon The Free exchange column on Italy posits that mutualisation of the country's debt throughout the EU would "relieve young Italians of doing penance for their forebears' sins" (November 10th).
The impulse to investigate and then posthumously sanctify one's forebears is regarded by the Mormons as divinely inspired, and it has prompted them to build up the world's largest genealogical database.
Unlike the G3 and G4 (pictured above) that preceded it, the G5 will not be an evolution of its forebears — it will look and feel "nothing like" those earlier Android smartphones.
But where it differs from the sacks and satchel our forebears might have fashioned by hand is in its recognition that just loading everything in from the top is awfully inefficient.
They used this technology so much that, Scott thinks, we should date the human-dominated phase of earth, the so-called Anthropocene, from the time our forebears mastered this new tool.
The great irony of all this—and perhaps what truly makes black millennials distinct from their forebears—is that we're supposed to believe that the playing field has finally evened out.
The findings, which were published Thursday in the journal Science, also provide insight into the origins of the vertebrates that became the forebears of our ancestors who first ventured onto land.
It feels like a bit of a paradox: Their forebears may have arrived on that island through some great feat of survival or exploration, but the present generation prefers familiar comforts.
Jimmy Kimmel, once a rather apolitical figure, cloaked himself in activist garb, pushing for — and against — legislation in a way that forebears like Johnny Carson and Jay Leno wouldn't have imagined.
Rather than repeat family myths about the individual effort and smarts of their forebears, those from wealthy backgrounds tell "money stories" that highlight the more complicated origins of their families' assets.
But it also fits into very easy categorization as an isometric role-playing building on its forebears with narrative and visual flourishes and referencing political ideologies with clear real-world analogues.
At the center of his work is the paradox of his situation: the grief and the freedom that accrue simultaneously as he writes his way toward and away from his forebears.
While Hu and Malcolm strove to include as many young and fresh perspectives in this year's biennial, it would be impossible to have a program of Taiwanese films without invoking its forebears.
For the duration of the service, Prince Alexander was wrapped in the sweeping family christening gown previously worn by his father and grandfather: It dates back to their early 20th century forebears.
During the service, Prince Oscar was wrapped in the family heirloom christening gown previously worn by his uncle and grandfather: It dates back to Prince Oscar's forebears in the early 20th century.
Women like Ann Leckie, N.K. Jemisin, Nisi Shawl, Kameron Hurley, Nnedi Okorafor, Aliette de Bodard, among others, are at the forefront of this transformation, and Le Guin was one of their forebears.
The New York Philharmonic will open its 175th anniversary season on Wednesday a little differently than its forebears in 1842: For the first time it will stream the concert on Facebook Live.
Some of Lévy's work on "Hyperion"—like the album's bright, pointillistic, eponymous opener—seems like an explicit homage to his German forebears, whose work can often be found in major art museums.
Sans some kind of complicated Time Bandits-esque scenario, it's safe to say we'll never know our forebears' opinions on, say, the internet's various controversial anthropomorphic frogs, but that's not the point.
Where other shoegaze and slowcore revivalists adopt the same sort of meek drollness that their forebears perfected, Strohmer treats his subjects like the matters of life and death that they really are.
In the process, he's arguably granted generative music a degree of mainstream exposure unprecedented in the work of his forebears—even Eno, who seems to mostly approach it as a theoretical exercise.
Punk had meant one thing in prison but another here, when he turned up to discover that the MC5 were cherished as forebears by the CBGB generation, which had adopted the term.
" The younger generation of libertarians who approvingly cite Rand today might be surprised to learn that she derided their forebears as "hippies" and, with typical hyperbole, "a monstrous, disgusting bunch of people.
And new condos were allowed at a location near the Shinnecock Canal, which the tribe had long considered a sacred place because it was a site where their forebears landed tribal canoes.
Like all of its Daytona forebears, it is a mechanical cosmograph that functions as both timekeeper and glorified stopwatch, with three subdials that racecar drivers can use to measure distance and speed.
Dr. Barrera-Guzmán's team suspects that the first male mixes between snow-capped and opal-crowned manakins bore this dull tuft, an intermediate between the white and iridescent caps of their forebears.
The forebears of Blue and White could not convince an Israel drifting right on the back of Russian immigration and Palestinian violence of the security and viability of a post-Netanyahu Israel.
Today, many successors to Rankin and her "sister suffragettes" are working with the same tenacity and vision as their forebears to secure an even more fundamental right — the right to life itself.
"But Don, your dad is an immigrant too," another man piped up, noting that Mr. Engeltjes's father, like many forebears of the district's voters, had come over from Holland at age 9.
Many historians have said the same thing about conservatism, especially the Trump variety, whose followers, like their leftier, Populist forebears, have found out the hard way that progress mows some men down.
Those 1977 models (which included entries from Commodore and Tandy) are also the forebears of the Web, Facebook, Google and pretty much whatever else you're using on whatever digital device is at hand.
Those 1977 models (which included entries from Commodore and Tandy) are also the forebears of the web, Facebook, Google, and pretty much whatever else you're using on whatever digital device is at hand.
It makes you wonder if his doomed point-forward forebears might have lived like this, too, if their teams had just given them the ball and gotten the hell out of the way.
Like those restaurateurs and their clients, many Canadians of Jewish origin sit somewhere on a spectrum between a full embrace of their forebears' identity and faith, and assimilation into the country's mainstream culture.
In essence, and despite the vastness of his budget, he is doing what his forebears did a hundred years ago—seeking out ever more outrageous ways in which to leave an audience dangling.
A cynic would say that the Frenchman is no more than a faded simulacrum of his English-speaking forebears, and that would be true if the only evidence were a sheaf of stills.
Some of these, at least, present millennials as they actually are: culturally distinct from their forebears, for sure, but distinguished chiefly by the magnitude of their debt and the paucity of their prospects.
The episode concludes that by dressing sexy, getting wasted, and grinding against dudes at parties, these college students are just as beholden to the patriarchy as their less well-educated, less progressive forebears.
What distinguishes these Texans from their forebears that tried and failed to upend the A.F.C. establishment is their confidence in their quarterback, a position that has bedeviled the city longer than the franchise.
And yet the closer I was getting, both geographically and psychologically, to the once-great Yiddish European civilization of my forebears, the more I began to experience the dull horror of its annihilation.
Unlike the rap-rock of a decade and a half ago, which was often clunky, expressed via brute force and a constant reminder of its forebears, Mr. Mulherin's blend is seamless and intuitive.
Their forms are similar to their smaller forebears': one particularly beautiful untitled piece is like an S-shaped snail with curving fins; another like the complicated pelvis of some eight-legged mythical bird.
But in "The Givers," David Callahan aims to introduce a new breed of megadonors— more numerous, more aggressive and vastly richer than their forebears — poised to reshape American society to an unprecedented degree.
In this interactive production, Erth, a troupe from Sydney, Australia, takes children on a multimedia tour of prehistory that uses giant, minutely detailed puppets to portray dinosaurs and a few of their forebears.
So this, our 241st birthday, seems just the time to invite some of our forebears to remind us — including those at the top of the government — why a free press is so important.
As he readied a collection based on the journey made by his Lebanese forebears through Ellis Island, Mr. Abboud talked about the grit required to survive the vicissitudes of an always fickle industry.
Like these forebears, Rivette avoids neat delineation between fact and fiction, and dream and reality, opting rather for a universe in which all thoughts, actions, and events maintain the same degree of verisimilitude.
Their sound is equally as indebted to metal and noodly sad boy emo bands like American Football and Algernon Cadwallader as it is to their queercore forebears in Black Fag and Pansy Division.
While there is no empirical evidence for disease transmission between the groups—yet—it stands to reason that our forebears carried pathogens from their native African turf with them as they swept through Europe.
No self-respecting constitutional scholar doubts that one of the hugely important matters for our Founding Fathers was to maintain this border, as many of our forebears had fled Europe because of religious oppression.
Given that lead has been known as a poison for centuries, why did our forebears in the 22000th and early 20043th centuries rely on it to carry so vital a fare as drinking water?
Mr Zavascki became a household name—in spite of the string of consonants inherited from his Polish forebears—because he oversaw investigations into the corruption scandal centred on Petrobras, the state-controlled oil company.
Families that came here for the same reasons our forebears came — to work, and study, and make a better life, in a place where we can talk and worship and love as we please.
Mr Kim has gone further than his forebears in giving priority to economic development, tolerating a big, semi-legal "grey market" and allowing the running of de facto private enterprises within state-owned firms.
Biaoqing embody the same Internet Ugly aesthetic as their Rage Comics forebears—their creators and editors tend to use cut-and-paste or low-effort Microsoft Paint-style drawing with little regard for perfectionism.
He described how he'd become enamored of zany irony religion Church of the Subgenius and its forebears, like Discordianism, a complex parody cult that mixed true and fictional events to create bizarre alternative histories.
The heirs to the Minutemen in the U.S. Army spent the centuries since (and, really, their forebears had spent the centuries before) massacring, displacing, and all but exterminating the original inhabitants of this continent.
Faced with an unbearable burden of anguish, loss and guilt, he looks to his Indian forebears' wisdom and decides that he will give his own son, LaRose, to the parents of the dead child.
Meanwhile, those who came to atheism via the new atheists might be startled to find that many of their intellectual forebears did not wage war on religion, or even feel any distaste for it.
The reason for undoing this emphasis is one of the underlying motivations of her work: she wants to move the ornamental from background to center stage in a very different way from her forebears.
Mr. Paik can trace his back 26 generations to scholars who helped formulate the Korean Hangul alphabet, while one of Ms. Lee's forebears was a leader in the early 20th century Korean independence movement.
Autofiction has long picked away at the boundary between fiction and nonfiction, particularly in France (although the genre's current English-language explosion has clear forebears in American writers like Chris Kraus and Kathy Acker).
Stephen Foster gets a frantic makeover in this instrumental showpiece, one of Domino's own favorites and a direct link to boogie-woogie forebears like Albert Ammons, whose "Swanee River Boogie" clearly sparked this version.
The Dhimurru Rangers are one of more than 100 Indigenous groups spread across the continent who have taken on the job of protecting the land of their forebears, combining traditional methods with contemporary conservation.
" Mr. Trump embraced these poor and despised foreigners as the forebears of "the more than 35 million Americans of Irish descent who contribute every day to all facets of life in the United States.
When they think of all the miseries their forebears survived, it's hard to accept that their latest — and perhaps final — battle is against suburban families who want a pretty place to kayak on the weekend.
"With a Turkish flag in one hand and Islam's green banner in the other, our victorious forebears entered Anatolia at Manzikert and marched to the middle of Europe with glory and honour," the president said.
Davis contends that Black women, like singers Billie Holliday, Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey and educators Ida B. Wells and Mary Church Terrell, should be recognized as the rightful forebears of the modern intersectional feminist movement.
But Eva has little in common with its forebears, like the globally recognized Transformers or the fan-favorite franchise Mobile Suit Gundam, both anime about humans and their big, sentient, rock 'em, sock 'em robots.
He was born in 1981 in Leicester, about a decade after his family settled in Britain after being kicked out of Uganda (where his forebears had moved from India in the 1880s) by Idi Amin.
Risking them for short-term profits is nothing short of a betrayal of the American people, and of our forebears who fought so that future generations could step outside just to enjoy the fresh air.
Therefore, if we don't think that we are currently living in a computer simulation, we are not entitled to believe that we will have descendants who will run lots of such simulations of their forebears.
And, under the quirks of European rules, we are eligible to apply for another country's citizenship, as long as we can produce documents like a birth certificate to prove our forebears' connections to the country.
Of seeing the field as a craft and part of a long lineage of intellectual forebears instead of as a terrain where the masters need to be overthrown for the latest junk to be installed.
Like her forebears, Vap­nyar doesn't oversell sentences or push unnecessary emotions; rather, she lines up telling details in a steady march of patient sentences, her tone carefully constructed, at once flat and comic and malleable.
Today's Indigenous Australians no more have the same relationship to the spiritual tradition of Dreamtime stories as did those first inhabitants than modern Greeks relate to "The Iliad" in the way their ancient forebears did.
With help from one of his musical forebears, Marty Stuart, and one of his peers, Brent Cobb, Stapleton has sold out his first solo show at the Garden, though tickets are still available through resellers.
It was a show so campy and daring that it was allowed to be a little weirder and more progressive than its more straight-laced forebears, especially in its era of latter-day Star Treks.
I met Winnicki in the National Movement's sparsely furnished Warsaw offices, where the walls are decorated with vintage photos of the marching, uniformed nationalist militias of the 1930s the party sees as its ideological forebears.
Their captive forebears were Native Americans — slaves frequently known as Genízaros (pronounced heh-NEE-sah-ros) who were sold to Hispanic families when the region was under Spanish control from the 218th to 19th centuries.
It's an honoring of the youth (and mortality) and sartorial sensibilities of the generation before his at the same time as it's an attempt to break the mold set by those relatively more conservative forebears.
Not every show can be the next "Next to Normal" or "[title of show]," but some of them can, and you can catch them at this summer festival, just as you once could their forebears.
With a fortune far exceeding the above-mentioned forebears, Bloomberg—especially when viewed as a potential major-party alternative to Trump—is embracing a dystopian vision of modern politics, where vast personal wealth rules all.
He has done us all a great service, taking an issue of overwhelming public importance, delving into its history, helping understand how our forebears handled it and building a platform to think about it today.
If we allow their pleas to heap more attention on white America, black and brown Americans will find ourselves refighting the battles our civil rights forebears fought, rather than continuing our long march toward racial justice.
In addition, there's zero evidence that these refugees "hate" America, the country they fled to from a war zone to make a new life, as did the forebears of so many Americans reading this article. 8.
We do, however, want to bring something of the Economist tower to our new home in the Adelphi—a modernised Art Deco building that, by coincidence, is close to the offices our bombed-out forebears occupied.
So perhaps the only feature of Arnaud Beltrame's life which is typical, rather than extraordinary, is this: for the first 33 of his 45 years, he was barely conscious of the Catholic faith of his forebears.
Election Year comes off feeling like a far more optimistic film than its forebears — if we band together and resist the violence being peddled to us, it tells us, we can end the cycle of oppression.
If we want to understand how and why The X-Files was able to transcend, against all odds, we need to look at both its forebears and the ways the show itself (sometimes subtly) altered television.
This, and her ease with vernacular language, puts Ward in fellowship with such forebears as Zora Neale Hurston and William Faulkner; Bois Sauvage, with its watchful children and desiccated vistas, is a kind of duskier Yoknapatawpha.
But every American who traces their lineage to an immigrant -- and except for Native Americans that's all of us -- has a duty this Christmas to reconnect to the hopes and fears that brought our forebears here.
That would have been speedy even for Kyrgios's grass-loving Australian forebears in the days when players did not bother sitting down on changeovers and when serve and volley was the rule instead of the exception.
The new generation of white nationalism seemingly does not see the need to hide behind hoods as their intellectual forebears may have done, because they do not think they will be held accountable for their views.
But Joy faces the same threat as its forebears, as the number of black-owned spaces dwindles, and the venues that remain aren't always eager to host large gatherings of black people on a regular basis.
They then compared the maps from modern seals with those of extinct seals, and found that extinct species were mostly biters, suggesting that the ability to bite is something that seals inherited from their terrestrial forebears.
It seems to me that Webster has taken up from his forebears the daunting challenge of making art that offers the viewer pleasure, yet does not turn away from the impending, inescapable chaos of time passing.
The works emerged from a family story about Samson's aunt, who is said to have come back from the dead after drowning, as well as a Xhosa belief that long-departed forebears sometimes appear by rivers.
When Abu Abdel Malik dug up his step-mother's body last Saturday to inter it beside the family's forebears in the Gogjali cemetery, he said it had begun to decompose and gave off a foul smell.
Moreover, the naturally occurring patterns in some stones — holes or circular depressions that resemble eyes, for example, or protuberances like noses — supposedly reveal a hard-wired hunger for representation: an aesthetic impulse in our evolutionary forebears.
Is the latest step in that metamorphosis, further embellishing the skeletal drumwork and dramatic gestures of their 2017 album Powerplant with hazed distortion and spindly instrumentation that recalls beloved forebears like Duster or Elliott Smith's band Heatmiser.
Victor isn't just healthy and fit; he's much smarter than his forebears now that his brain has been enhanced through neural implants that expanded his memory, allow him to download knowledge, and even help him make decisions.
But these restaurants are both more urbane and more ambitious than their forebears — places where the food, wine and design are considered so carefully that the casual, family-style service and ambience feel, at first, like paradoxes.
When today's younger, socialist-leaning activists disparage older, more Establishment-oriented left-wingers as liberals, they are echoing their New Left forebears of the 1960s and 1970s, who used the term to denounce those deemed insufficiently radical.
Te Rina Wineera, 17, who had recently started learning celestial navigation and was on her first major voyage aboard the waka Hinemoana, said she newly appreciated what her forebears had survived on their journey to New Zealand.
Its humble materials, shaped largely by gravity, challenge the conception of the artist as supreme maker, and lightly flocked fibers on the strings give it an organic character quite unlike the chilly perfection of his Minimalist forebears.
Less concerned with questions of form and style than their autofiction forebears, these novels and stories suggest that fiction has finally begun to move from its place of deep solipsism to address a deepening sense of futility.
Keeping that in mind might give you a better picture, but it's still no substitute for playing the thing itself, as KRZ uses those forebears as a foundation for its own interests rather than merely imitating them.
Vegan vitriol against animal products can resemble that of "Carnage", a British film from 2017 in which bucolic youngsters 50 years hence look back with disgust on their forebears' consumption of flesh and milk meant for calves.
Following in those footsteps meant more than simply borrowing branding ideas, though, and the B.I.G. verse on this song is a good capsule of the kind of technical lessons that Wayne took away from his Brooklyn forebears.
This is a homage to Dubai's transformation from desert backwater to a global financial hub, for which Emiratis still express gratitude to their ruling families, crediting them with putting an end to the harsh existence of their forebears.
Yet that policy would acknowledge that euro-area countries share a fiscal fate, relieve young Italians of doing penance for their forebears' sins and make fiscal probity for Italy a less Sisyphean task—and, perhaps, more politically tolerable.
His units of Don Cossacks — a martial tribe whose medieval forebears fled serfdom to live as free men on the frontiers of imperial Russia — were among the most outspoken militias in their opposition against the LNR's ruling authorities.
"How can we easily give up our nuclear weapons that North Korea developed when it had nothing to eat?" asked Baek, whose lapel pin portrayed the last two generations of North Korea's leaders, forebears of its current ruler.
The tape fit with Gawker's sensibility — punching up at the arrogance of wealth and celebrity (in this case an heiress who was famously famous for being famous) in the media pirate's tradition of its forebears at Spy magazine.
The Pew Research Center reports that as of last year, 603 percent of those aged 18-35 are highly likely to support legalization, as are 57 and 56 percent of their Gen X and Baby Boomer forebears, respectively.
Dense with exotic proteins, teeming with legumes favored by health-conscious humans, they are promoted as delicious as well as nutritious — better for gluten-sensitive bellies, closer to the ancestral, protein-rich diets of the Yorkie's savage forebears.
But we would be remiss if we did not etch his name alongside his illustrious forebears, because this country would not be the same were it not for the courageous service of all three of these great men.
Concerns about the harmful effects of smartphones on our social interactions will be replaced by the realization that some people are just rude, and we will marvel at how our forebears coped without the latest time-saving gadget.
"This red land was hard won and paid for with the fresh blood of tens of millions of revolutionary forebears," Mr. Xi said when he honored revolutionary "martyrs" in Xinyang in mid-September, according to an official account.
At one part of the Tapajós National Forest reserve, where 2120km² (2000% of the total area) burned, saplings have shot up among the ashes of their giant forebears, but it will be years before they form a canopy.
They still deliver insistent, neo-psychedelic drones, reaching back to the most ritualistic 1960s songs of the Velvet Underground, the Doors and  their hometown forebears from Austin, the 13th Floor Elevators, along with a touch of 1970s krautrock.
Young women had already begun to sport leg warmers as a fashion statement, though not, as their forebears did, to signal an allegiance to the ballet barre, but to prove membership in a new tribe of aerobics fanatics.
The service robot job apocalypse may be coming, in other words—when and if the kiosks and face-scanners and robot bartenders and busboys are ready en masse, there's little doubt they'll be deployed to replace their fleshy forebears.
It's present in the tight focus and instinctual playing of the group's New York-bred forebears like the Bill Evans Trio and the Miles Davis Quintet—lean, muscular ensembles dedicated to exploring and expanding the confines of their sound.
Millennials, who tend to be more progressive than their forebears, make up almost a third of the voting population, but in the 27 election only half of eligible voters between the ages of 214 and 29 cast their ballot.
President Jimmy Carter, for example, left the Southern Baptist Convention because he disagreed with its views about women — but Mr. Carter remains his own kind of devout and liberal Baptist in the tradition of his 18th-century religious forebears.
Their approach owes less to their political forebears than it does to David Icke, so it is perhaps ironic that there are no two men on Earth who look more like lizards trapped uncomfortably within ill-fitting human skin.
In the seventies, prog-inspired American bands like Kansas and Styx had conquered arenas, and by the end of the decade there was Rush, a Yes-obsessed trio of Canadians who received even worse reviews than their British forebears.
No one else in the current world of R&B does exactly what he does as a producer; his closest forebears are artists like Clams Casino, Oakland cloud-rap beatmaker duo Friendzone or Yung Lean's Sadboy stable of beatmakers.
Like all good retro-styled projects it knows precisely what was fun about its forebears—early 90s first-person-shooters, or "Doom Clones"—the sheer speed, the need for fast lateral movement, the responsive controls and crunchy, evocative environments.
" The New Yorker noted that Shire's work is "a first-generation woman always looking backward and forward at the same time, acknowledging that to move through life without being haunted by the past lives of your forebears is impossible.
In Minneapolis, bands like Rivethead, Banner Pilot, Dear Landlord, and Off With Their Heads (who Costello moonlighted in) would all offer their versions of Dillinger Four's sound, making gruff pop-punk that owed a huge debt to their forebears.
Though it's still missing a few video-minded features found on some other Canon DSLRs, like the flip-out screen on the 2105D and 24D, the 22D Mark IV is better equipped for video than any of its forebears.
The war had taken from the peasants who had been driven into urban areas to find safety what they cherished most: the land that their forebears had walked and tilled, and the homes that had sheltered them for generations.
The discovery in the Lithuanian crypt is one of the latest in a long line of important medical findings that have used intensive analysis of mummified to show how diseases connect modern humans to the experiences of our forebears.
Shashi Tharoor: The arguments have been surprisingly well received, in the sense that a number of Britons, including Conservatives, have reacted with sympathy to the arguments and with a certain amount of chagrin about the record of their forebears.
The youthful activists at the heart of the reform effort, labeled at the time as exponents of a "New Politics," brought to their engagement with mainstream party politics an outlook that bore some clear continuities with their programmatic liberal forebears.
First, there is the use of the word "snowflake" to criticise younger generations—those more likely to be in favour of affirmative action and gender-neutral bathrooms, for instance, who are perceived as thin-skinned and less resilient than their forebears.
Chicago blues is rowdy and licentious, but it carries some of the lonesomeness of the genre's country forebears: J. B. Smith singing "No More Good Time in the World for Me," Robert Johnson worrying over the hellhound on his trail.
Yet the way the Hong Kong police have responded to the provocations stands in marked contrast to how their forebears dealt with past violent protests, let alone the way mainland Chinese authorities dealt with the protests in Beijing in 19983.
His research into his family is intensive, and he offers vivid portraits of his forebears throughout—none more so than his great-grandfather Joe Todd, a Virginian who used to cock his shotgun at intimidators from the Ku Klux Klan.
These short epistolary portions alternate with longer chapters in which Waldy recounts the lives of his forebears, the Toula-Silbermann-Tolliver clan, a personal genealogy that turns out to be woven through the warp and weft of the 20th century.
The fact that a ton of late-2000s Warped Tour acts would add keyboard parts to their breakdowns certainly felt like a move derived from The Locust, yet those bands had a fraction of the artistic intent of their forebears.
" Contrary to the pundit consensus of the time, the author believes that Ronald Reagan, in his much celebrated role as a communicator, was no innovator but instead "a master of methods that a long string of forebears had incrementally ­developed.
An outpost of the TIGER 21 peer network, founded in the United States in the 1990s, will help Switzerland's rich run their affairs, said Eric Sarasin, an ex-private banker whose forebears ran the family's namesake bank for over a century.
After decades of campaigning for their country to acknowledge their forebears' agonies, news came that the House of Representatives had voted by 405 to 11 to recognise as genocide the persecution of the Armenians launched by the Ottoman empire in 1915.
The genetic similarities in African-Americans tend to cluster along the very train lines that their forebears took as they left the Jim Crow South: the Illinois Central to Chicago, for example, and the Atlantic Coast line up the East Coast.
While there are many important differences between the foreign policies of Putin and of his Soviet forebears, one vital similarity is his propensity to bring periods of improved relations with the United States to an abrupt halt with aggressive actions.
Colonial Ice Cream Family Day (Saturday) Young contemporary Americans may feel that they have little in common with their colonial forebears, but they'll be interested to hear that they did share an enthusiasm for a timeless summer treat: ice cream.
According to Jon Moramarco, editor of wine industry newsletter the Gomberg-Fredrikson report, health-conscious boomers coming of age in the 21980s were turning away from the hard-drinking habits of their martini-sipping forebears and looking for lower-alcohol options.
In less capable hands, it would be corny, but Starcrawler just makes it a hell of a lot of fun—less an ode to forebears like Ozzy, than a revitalization that puts some lifeblood back into long-anemic guitar music.
Radiohead doesn't uphold the legacy of political music so much as holds a mirror to it, inverting dialogues sparked by forebears like Bob Dylan (see: the squarely un-Dylan "Subterranean Homesick Alien") to ask how the hell we got here.
In "Lewiston," set on the Idaho side of the Snake River border with Washington, Marnie, a 24-year-old who cites Lewis as an ancestor, returns from Seattle to homestead the land on which she and her forebears were raised.
Like their farmer forebears with their crops, the parents of Norwich learned through trial and error the best methods of nourishing athletes who go on to productive and meaningful adulthoods as entrepreneurs, businesspeople, healers, coaches — and volunteers on the side.
These lawmakers are the ones who are the most likely to live by the credo of their forebears, said former Senator John Warner of Virginia, a veteran of World War II and Korea whose voice remains strong at nearly 92.
Alharthi tells us that Zarifa's forebears were kidnapped from Kenya, via Zanzibar, by pirates in the late nineteenth century, when wealthy Omanis were craftily evading the pact that the Sultan had made with the British to outlaw the slave trade.
Recorded in Japan by the Atlanta-born artist, a son of Ethiopian immigrants, "Han" laces R&B grooves with filtered vocals and vintage synth sounds, taking cues from the Japanese singer Yukihiro Takahashi, as well as American forebears like Prince.
One of the plaintiffs, the Backsen family, fears that rising sea levels could sweep away the farm ploughed by their forebears for 300 years could be swept away, along with the North Sea island of Pellworm on which it lies.
I have a feeling that a lot of millennials and Gen Z'ers have actually inherited from our Gen X forebears a certain suspicion of any art that's too popular — mainstream appeal can imply a sort of basicness, a lack of depth.
The kingdom's strict social customs and rapid development created a nation in which community feeling is highly valued but opportunities for public gathering are scarce, one that reveres the harsh life of its Bedouin forebears but in which obesity is rife.
Hardly anyone was untainted, including our cherished Puritan forebears, who not only held African slaves but also waged wars against New England Natives, kept some as slaves for themselves, and sent others to work on plantations in Barbados and Jamaica.
An inhabitant of the Splott district of Cardiff, the Welsh capital, whose streets she stalks with verbally unbridled abandon, Effie (Sophie Melville) has something of the primal fury of her classical forebears, even if her language more frequently reaches down to the gutter.
When Girls premiered on HBO in 2012, viewers immediately noticed its four main characters, Hannah, Marnie, Shoshanna, and Jessa, presented a more imperfect — often downright gritty — version of life as a twenty-something in New York City than most of their fictional forebears.
Dudu Tassa's new album, El-Hajar, which in Arabic means "exile," is a mash-up of modern takes on melodies made popular by his forebears, the late Daoud and Saleh al-Kuwaiti, who fled from Iraq to Israel close to 70 years ago.
This latest chapter in the saga of a clan built by an immigrant is a betrayal of the dream that brought the president's forebears across the Atlantic and a repudiation of the spirit that they displayed as they made it in America.
But more than the fact that there's still a healthy dose of non-originals in their setlists, like their iconic Hanukkah shows, their covers feel just as much of a reflection of the band's ethos than any reverence to their musical forebears.
Without learning about our forebears and truly understanding the challenges they faced, the knowledge they cultivated, and the triumphs they championed, we miss out on knowing how we actually got to this present moment and whose lives helped shape our current reality.
Though her blending of speedy sounds across genre lines has forebears (she specifically cites a Machinedrum mix as an inspiration), she uses the approach in this ecstatic way that makes it feel as though the whole world around you is getting motion-blurred.
It might be easier to trace the genealogy of an alley cat than of the typical Hollywood studio: Over the last century or so, most have accumulated a tangled list of owners and corporate forebears — and none more so than Paramount Pictures.
To this end, Macron extended his hand to offer a renewed partnership between the French and American people to join together in advancing the universal values of human liberty, a mission set forth by our forebears on both sides of the Atlantic.
But outside Ms. Lynch's windows are signs that he is not: There is the nest atop a utility pole he fell from last year, and there is Kennedy International Airport, the destination for Elvis's forebears, imported in crates to be sold as pets.
" Russian diplomats claim three 19th-century poets as their most distinguished forebears: "Eugene Onegin" author Alexander Pushkin, "Woe from Wit" playwright Alexander Griboyedov and the romantic poet Fyodor Tyutchev, who wrote the now-famous maxim: "Russia cannot be understood with the mind alone.
But for those whose opposition comes more from ignorance and misinformation—victims of effective propagandizing from far-right internet forums, cable news programs, and White House talking points—talking about voters' own undocumented forebears is a vital step to changing their minds.
"The Lost Family" intersperses expository sections with an intermittent narrative of the step-by-step journey of Alice Collins Plebuch, a woman who is thrown for a loop when AncestryDNA results contradict her impression that her forebears were Irish, English and Scottish.
From him, I learned that some of my forebears came to the American Midwest in the 20163th century not only for the reasons I'd assumed — the arable soil offered to European immigrants by the Homestead Act, the freedoms of speech and religion.
Dr. King's faith put him at odds with white Christians who believed it was their mission to keep separate the races — the same people whose forebears believed it was their duty to enslave Africans and punish blacks who sought to escape their hardship.
While Willett contends that she can't speak for Black women, she believes the social media backlash—which resulted in Wilson blocking several prominent voices of Black Twitter—had to do with the actresses' neglectful comment that dismissed her plus-size forebears of color.
The technological advances on the skin of those gloves have been so profound that they now enable receivers to snare passes their forebears never dreamed of catching, and in making the seemingly impossible possible, they may be changing the way football is played.
Back in 2011, the movies tried to make a star of him in a recycled version of "Conan the Barbarian," which seemed to believe that all there is to do with fit actors is have them do the routines of fit forebears.
But a major motivation for her loyalty to handcraft is sustaining a tie to forebears who were blacksmiths, woodworkers and basket makers (and sharecroppers, picking cotton and tobacco) — and, most important, to her mother, with whom she lived until her death in 2011.
Last week in a ceremony, Bristol Museum officials returned the remains to representatives of the Ti'at Society, a maritime organization of the Tongva, whose forebears lived on the four southern Channel Islands and across the Los Angeles basin for thousands of years.
Shteyngart's fourth and latest novel, "Lake Success," veers from its forebears by placing a Long Island-born financier at its center, rather than Russian émigrés or their children, and for the most part shuns themes of transnational displacement and the hyphenated existence.
"They may not know what it was like for our forebears to use their own flesh to carry the destiny of our country and our people," the commentator wrote, "but at least they are making an effort to draw closer to our elders."
An expansive cohort of rappers, producers and designers whose origins can be traced to a Kanye West fan forum, this self-described "boy band" from Los Angeles inherited the anarchic spirit, branding savvy and wildfire popularity of their most obvious forebears, Odd Future.
Pentecostalism's appeal to the transient and insecure is also portrayed in a study of a little-known micro-community: Brazilians of Japanese descent who move to Japan (ie, the land their forebears left a few generations back) to work in the car industry.
In another movie, she'd be the blond ditz to co-star Ella Balinska's sleek badass — the Cameron Diaz to Balinska's Lucy Liu — but Stewart plays Sabina as too butch for her to read as a ditz the way her Angelic forebears did.
The "portable" version of one of the Pocket Operator's earliest forebears — the telharmonium, constructed more than a hundred years ago — cost more than $5 million to build in today's dollars, weighed 200 tons and required a team of specialists to achieve peak performance.
The "portable" version of one of the Pocket Operator's earliest forebears — the telharmonium, constructed more than a hundred years ago — cost more than $5 million to build in today's dollars, weighed 200 tons and required a team of specialists to achieve peak performance.
"He can play those drums," he told the journalist Howard Mandel for his 2007 book, "Miles, Ornette, Cecil: Jazz Beyond Jazz," comparing Mr. Murray favorably to three of his more famous forebears on the instrument: Tony Williams, Max Roach and Art Blakey.
That said, many breeds have health problems because we've crafted them into impossible shapes that wouldn't be found in a state of nature; dogs are descended from a wolf-like ancestor, with most recognized breeds exhibiting only a superficial resemblance to their evolutionary forebears.
Teachers in those right-to-work states, where the union presence isn't at strong and Republicans run things, connected with their forebears in Chicago and Charleston, West Virginia, through social media groups like the Badass Teachers Association (BAT) that cropped up in the aughts.
The Marundes take on similar roles to their Flip or Flop forebears Christina and Tarek El Moussa, with Bristol, 34, an MMA fighter, serving as the contractor and his wife Aubrey, also 34, a realtor, taking on the design and selling side of things.
Her ability to make her thinking, beliefs, and ideas conform to those of the larger group is likely to be more important to her happiness, success, and (especially in the case of our prehistoric forebears) survival than her sensitivity to objective facts about reality.
If you're partial to something more traditional and overtly Slavic, head further north, to Karczma ("country tavern"), in the heart of Little Poland, where waitresses in folk dresses dole out bread bowls of white borscht and reflexively address locals in the language of their forebears.
They teased the internet with a cover of Toto's "Rosanna" before finally blessing the rains; they then invited Toto's Steve Pocaro to play "Africa" with them on Kimmel; they seem to have made good buddies with their yacht-rock-adjacent forebears along the way.
My interest in the Stonewall riots stems largely from my search for trans forebears, a search for a history in the wake of cultural erasure enacted by both assimilationist gay rights movements and by the dominant, heteronormative, white supremacist culture of the United States.
"Taking a look through the catalogue, one is confronted with the idea that there is no form of modern sexual behavior that hasn't already been perfected by our forebears — with the lots stretching back to ancient Rome," Constantine Frangos, Head of the Sale, told Hyperallergic.
She helpfully provides references with the spines of books stacked in "It Is So" and another painting of sexual intimacy, "Night Studio" (2009): Bruegel, Goya, Vuillard, Munch, Nolde, Kirchner, and Ernst, among other forebears, and her figure-painting contemporaries Nicola Tyson and Peter Doig.
With that baneful "illusion" gone, and with all our psychopharmaceuticals and empirically grounded cognitive therapy techniques firmly in place, can we assert that we've advanced toward some more rational state of mental health than that enjoyed by our forebears in the heyday of analysis?
Still, although virtually all of us are here as a result of immigration, the vast majority of us are here as a result of legal immigration—that is, we or our forebears entered and stayed here legally, in conformity with then-existing immigration laws.
Less appreciated are the peace and stability it has provided to hundreds of millions of people over generations and the myriad ways — from disappearing cellphone roaming charges to cheap borderless travel — it has improved life for Europeans whose forebears lived in a charnel house.
On the group's latest record, "Life Without Sound," Dylan Baldi, Cloud Nothings' creative mastermind, takes cues from forebears like Rivers Cuomo of Weezer and Paul Westerberg of the Replacements; an enthralling scuzz prevails, but the guitar hooks are sharper and the choruses far more hummable.
Now, staring down the barrel of a congressional investigation and public outcry at its outsize influence, Facebook is coming to grips with what its forebears facing antitrust concerns have long grappled with: Even the world's most powerful companies must answer to the federal government.
For Rupert Sanders' take on the film, which hits theaters nationwide today, he enlisted the help of a sprawling, multi-studio VFX team to build a metropolis that updates his animated forebears, and becomes one of the most gratifying aspects of the new film.
Artists whose families have a long musical heritage might not like people bringing up their artistic forebears all the time, but it's hard to talk about Sunny Levine without mentioning that he comes from one of the most legendary musical bloodlines on the planet.
They exemplify a newer breed of USBM that's taken root in recent years, post-Cascadian boom; their balance of savagery and delicacy takes a heavy influence from its European forebears, but retains an urgency, a straightforwardness, and a pathos born of urban blight that's all American.
It was foreshadowed by other groups, which had taken up arms in the hope of an independent Muslim homeland in Mindanao, and for a while aped the tactics of its forebears, groups like the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
In a time when all of these things converge to embolden individuals to take to the streets and spread messages of hate no longer shrouded in the hoods and robes of their forebears, technology can play an important role in shining a light on those involved.
A black-owned gallery is to this day an exception, though in the last few years, a small group of black gallery owners and directors — taking their cue from an even smaller group of forebears — are working hard to prevent the art world from repeating its mistakes.
As wolves are recolonizing the wide-open spaces of the West, they are running into a buzzsaw of political meddling at the hands of a ranching industry that yearns for the glory days of its forebears, who killed wolves to the brink of extinction generations ago.
Aligning oneself with the legendary poet and artist Gil-Scott Heron, widely considered one of hip-hop's forebears, is bold for any young M.C. But that didn't keep the Chicago-based rapper Mick Jenkins from naming his 2018 album "Pieces of a Man," after Heron's 1971 debut.
Many of them line the 367-foot-long central gallery that forms the spine of the Prado and creates a visual nexus, revealing the links between the great masters of Spanish painting — El Greco, Ribera, Zurbarán, Maíno, Velázquez and Murillo — and their Italian and Flemish forebears.
The "alt-right" is itself a euphemism invented by racists who wanted to lose the stigma of their hateful beliefs, and its foot-soliders know—perhaps better than even their forebears—that the best way to spread their ideas through fashion, music, and comedy is via a Trojan Horse.
The wreckage — yet to be excavated and formally verified — has galvanized historians and reawakened the pain of enslavement among African-American descendants of the Clotilda captives, some of whom still live in what is called Africatown, a community not far from downtown Mobile that was founded by their forebears.
Despite Kuma's professed desire to distance himself from his forebears, it clearly resembles Arata Isozaki's famous but unrealized "Clusters in the Air" (1960-62), a plan for housing projects in Tokyo, in which a single pillar supports capsule-like apartments, piled one above the other, like Kuma's beams.
Although he absorbed the visually oriented Imagist techniques of forebears like Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams, Ferlinghetti updated that spare, graphical style into a less compressed and more embodied, spoken-word poetics which he dubbed "wide-open" poetry, after a remark on his work by Chilean poet Pablo Neruda.
" Some of Obama's words feel especially significant in light of what has happened during Trump's first eight months in office, writing that presidents are "guardians of those democratic institutions and traditions — like rule of law, separation of powers, equal protection and civil liberties — that our forebears fought and bled for.
And it is a credit to Ms Ginsburg—along with her forebears, including New York feminist lawyer Dorothy Kenyon (played by Kathy Bates)—that she developed a brick-by-brick litigation strategy that would, as she put it to the justices in 1973, ultimately take men's "feet off our necks".
Even when he's explicitly invoking his forebears, on tracks like "These Blues" and "Cheapster," he'll bring in some of his spacier impulses to avoid following in the dodgy tradition of white UK bluesmen before him (it should come as no surprise that he's not really a big fan of Eric Clapton).
But this weekend, the Taney and Scott legacies will be brought together less contentiously when Lynne M. Jackson, a great-great-granddaughter of Scott, and Charles Taney, a great-great-grandnephew of Taney, meet onstage at the Actors Studio in Manhattan for a conversation about race, reconciliation and their famous forebears.
And as my fellow Jews the world over light menorahs, the eternal flames twisting through centuries to connect them to their woebegone forebears, my family will gather to pay our respects to Hanukkah Harry, the Not Ready for Prime Time Player who delivers toys to Jewish girls and Jewish boys.
As an artist who draws connections between today's young activists and their civil rights forebears, she seemed a natural choice to be among 11 socially conscious artists selected to create murals highlighting Atlanta's past, present and future in time for the Super Bowl, when the city will be in the spotlight.
Previous Trek shows with tie-ins to earlier iterations sometimes struggle to keep the story their own — see the "Voyager" episode "Death Wish" involving Q. But the best ones ("Unification" in "The Next Generation") keep the tone the show has already established while also properly integrating external elements from its forebears.
While Rousseau and Gauguin were European men painting tropical scenes populated by animals and indigenous people for an audience like themselves, Tarver is a woman of color prodding viewers to play the role of peeping Tom in an untamed jungle — to look in a manner similar to her exoticizing French forebears.
As news breaks that Trump pulled out of talks with North Korea, listening to the album's opener, "Graffiti," feels as in touch with fears of a deadly nuclear winter as its forebears: OMD's "Enola Gay," the Fixx's "Red Skies," and most saliently Alphaville's "Forever Young" (about kids dying in a nuclear holocaust).
Indeed, a paper published in the latest edition of the Journal of Geology, by Brian Thomas of Washburn University, in Kansas, and Adrian Melott of the University of Kansas, suggests that a series of such stellar explosions may have nudged humanity's forebears down from their trees and up onto their hind legs.
"In addition to the technical hurdles of getting spectrum-hopping, cooperative devices to play nice with each other and their inert, fixed-spectrum forebears, we will also have to convince the FCC to un-capture itself from the industries it regulates so that it takes action in the public interest," Doctorow says.
More than a decade of deprivation and desperation, with little hope of relief, has led thousands of young Gazans to throw themselves into a protest that few, if any, think can actually achieve its stated goal: a return to the homes in what is now Israel that their forebears left behind in 22.
Wedged between some technically-proficient-but-soulless prog-noodling and plodding-but-uninspiring black-death, Auðn offered a fresh take on black metal that pays respect to its forebears while threatening to step into realms of brilliance that could see them join the current flock of Icelandic innovators, Svartidauði, Sinmara and Misþyrming.
Whether it's thinking about the clothes you're putting on or trying to write a book or trying to open an artisanal woodworking shop, remember that what made your forebears great is that they didn't try to carefully place themselves on the continuum of someone else's history, they were creating their own continuums.
They want to stress three main things: First, what we know about the past is shaped by our contemporary biases; second, the tools we use to study the past were fashioned by long-dead scholarly forebears whose ideologies have to be interrogated; and third, there is no one fixed version of the past.
With an exterior of exposed aggregate (a type of concrete left unsealed to reveal its craggy components) tinted a bone hue that Van Duysen tested a dozen times to ensure it would vanish, mirage-like, into its sandy surroundings, the compound achieves the opposite effect of its Brutalist forebears, which overpowered cityscapes.
From the washing machine-sourced glee of Matmos' Ultimate Care II, to the soaring vocal drones and quivering samples of Good Willsmith's Things Our Bodies Used to Have, to the shuddering household sounds of Wanda Group's Ornate Circular, the collagist approach of our concrète forebears can open up a surprising spectrum of emotions.
He tells us what he learns about cousin marriage, his own forebears, others' shameful and worthy ancestors, polyamory, our recently expanded definitions of the word "family," the Hatfields and McCoys, the Temperance movement (because he's trying to decide whether there should be alcohol at a family reunion he's planning), and so on.
Their forebears include the Swiss provocateur Dieter Roth, who printed his 1968 poetry journals on bags filled with sauerkraut, lamb or vanilla pudding (the last spiked with urine), and the British sculptor Antony Gormley, whose 1980-81 "Bed," built of 600 loaves of bread, featured depressions as if left by sleeping bodies.
News Analysis UNITED NATIONS — President Trump, in declaring Tuesday that sovereignty should be the guiding principle of affairs between nations, sketched out a radically different vision of the world order than his forebears, who founded the United Nations after World War II to deal collectively with problems they believed would transcend borders.
To his mind, the "Guardians of the Galaxy" movies are still fulfilling his urge to tell stories about characters with complex, interconnected needs — even if one of those characters happens to be a talking raccoon — and to maintain the innovative traditions of his moviemaking forebears, at price tags upward of $170 million.
While most of the 24 million people of North Korea bear the costs and suffer the miseries inflicted by Pyongyang's totalitarian regime, Kim himself has accomplished the transition of power from his late father, Kim Jong Il, who died in 2012, and is building an arsenal his forebears could only dream of.
The 16 participants, each with ancestral connections to the city's working-class East End, spend three weeks living in these conditions and toiling the way their forebears did — making matchbooks, selling books and turning wood — as each episode propels them a decade into Britain's future, and that much closer to welfare reform.
Some of the most exacting housekeepers I know are, in fact, men, whose sharing of the care of their children has led them down the same well-traveled road as their feminine forebears, for whom the house became an extension of the self and therefore subject to the self's same vulnerability, neuroticism and pride.
Arriving in Oxford to study English literature, she's also prompted to track down a rumored inheritance: a collection of novels, diaries, paintings and other "Brontë treasure" that may have been left to her by her father, Tristan Whipple, an esteemed scholar who "spent his entire life trying to deconstruct" the writings of his famous forebears.
At a time when national unity is elusive, when our partisan rancor seems ever more toxic, when the simple concept of truth is disputed, that story informs who we are, where we came from, what our forebears believed and — perhaps the profoundest question any people can ask themselves — what they were willing to die for.
Yet a related feature film, in which the artist walks through contemporary Japan in the guises of Vermeer, Velázquez and many other European forebears, reveals that historical imitation is hardly a goal — after all, even Snapchat lets you overlay your photos with a van Gogh filter — but a means to reckon with modern alienation.
They expertly execute speed metal's core tenets—heavy metal, thrash, even They simply show up, plug in, and shred—echoing the loose, bare-bones approach of their forebears down to their song titles ("Night Slasher" is a particularly sick ripper), leather-clad aesthetic, reckless tempos, and vocalist Dimi's high-pitched squeals and unhinged laughter.
Vulnerable women in the area can be "pushed into selling sex for survival through poverty, for as little as a can of cider or a packet of cigarettes," Branch claims, adding that their vulnerabilities are just as layered as their forebears—many of those she works with grapple with drug addiction and histories of abuse.
These modern relatives tend to be smaller than Cambrian forebears, and while they still have spines on the sides of their head, they are not nearly so plentiful as the armaments on the head of the delightfully bizarre C. praetermissus—a true chaetognath OG. Get six of our favorite Motherboard stories every day by signing up for our newsletter.
But while "The Bold Type" certainly features plenty of club nights and messy run-ins with exes, it also updates the conventions of its forebears, with a great emphasis on its characters' careers — the three best friends work together at a glossy magazine inspired by Cosmopolitan — and on thoughtful conversations about race, feminism, sexuality and media ethics.
After the grunge explosion and the birth of so-called "alternative rock" brought on by Nirvana's emergence in the early 90s, the rest of the decade's mainstream rock airwaves were plagued by increasingly same-y sounding "post-grunge" acts that sanded down the depressive bile of their forebears until it sounded smooth, frictionless, and utterly corporate.
Dr. Blobel, who joined Dr. Palade's laboratory in 1967, inherited from his scientific forebears the knowledge that each living cell — about one quadrillion of them in an adult human body — contains a billion protein molecules that are constantly being created inside tiny bladder-like cavities called the endoplasmic reticulum, which is encased in a protective membrane.
House Democrats had their hand forced, but as long as Rudy Giuliani is shouting at Howard Kurtz on Fox News instead of sitting in the Capitol basement room that once held Charles Woolley, it's difficult to imagine today's Democratic leaders in Congress acting with the same zeal in pursuit of justice as their Radical Republican forebears.
Sculptor, printmaker, installation artist, performer, quilt maker, storyteller, and jeweler Joyce J. Scott affirms the femininity of her forebears, giving them the finery they deserve, most notably in the installation "Harriet's Closet," which she describes as a "dream boudoir" for Harriet Tubman, the "inner sanctum of a great lady," with such items as quilts, shawls, hats, and beads.
While Airbus used control sticks that pilots could quickly program and release—leaving them in what can appear to copilots to be a neutral position, which is one of the sources of confusion in the 447 crash—Boeing still used easily identifiable "old-fashioned" levers that resembled their mechanical forebears, and declined to embrace "auto-throttling" in its cockpits as Airbus did.
Is it that the modern megacorps have inherited from their forebears the obsession with growth at all costs, a religious drive to cast their net over every aspect of the entire world, so it's still not enough for each of those companies to make billions upon billions from advertising and commerce to spend on their famous — and now sometimes infamous — "moonshot" projects?
He and Shawn Michaels, his rival both in-ring and out, were forebears of a highly technical, fast-paced, stamina-intensive style that came into vogue more by necessity than choice: Vince McMahon was in deep trouble with the feds over alleged steroid disbursement, and WWE had to shift the focus away from the guys with physiques only chemicals could buy.
While the rest of us may not stock shelves at a Hobby Lobby, teach essay writing online while eating ourselves into obese oblivion ("The Whale") or peddle fireworks on the side of the road, we have most likely suffered anguish over the sins of our forebears, or have been driven to commit questionable acts out of fear for a family member's future.
No reality television star has run for president before, but Mr. Trump, with his grasp of the art of notoriety, has forebears of a kind in General MacArthur and Charles A. Lindbergh, the celebrity aviator whose "America First" slogan Mr. Trump has appropriated, and in Hearst and Henry Ford, a pair of renowned and eccentric tycoons who eyed the presidency.
Over an early lunch of eggs and toast at the Gotham Lounge in the Peninsula Hotel in Midtown Manhattan, a few days before the final presidential debate this month, the pair discussed the coming election in historical terms: the temperamental forebears of Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump among our presidential ranks, the ambitions of candidates and their skills for the job.
It's a reminder that while the internet may pass as godly and god-given—think of its ubiquitousness, its inescapability, and the bowed-head devotion it inspires—at its heart and at its origin is actually a very hard human thing: evolutionary, faulty and ugly, as complex and problematic as its forebears in road and train and electricity networks were.
Hillary knows we can insist on a lawful and orderly immigration system while still seeing striving students and their toiling parents as loving families, not criminals or rapists; families that came here for the same reasons our forebears came – to work, and study, and make a better life, in a place where we can talk and worship and love as we please.
Over the next decade, my hesitation gave way to resentment, and I now loathe Boston fandom for its parochialism, the blathering on about history and the deep-seated belief that rooting for Tom Brady through all the team's scandals counts as an act of civil disobedience equal to that of those Massachusetts forebears who threw crates of tea into Boston Harbor.
Despite such wishful thinking — or posturing — at the top, Putinism has been steadily falling apart: Government-controlled media are struggling to sustain the president's falling ratings; Russia's regions are impoverished; the oil- and gas-dependent economy is anemic; Russia's elites are consumed by infighting for pieces of a shrinking pie; and the young generation is less susceptible than their forebears to government propaganda.
A political bind for LBJ The report's empathy for black life scandalized many in mainstream politics, erecting a seemingly permanent demarcation between conservative law-and-order advocates who decried it as justifying lawlessness and political activists of various stripes, most notably King, who embraced the findings as incontrovertible proof of a message they and their forebears had articulated since Reconstruction.
The approach pays off in a group of fresh, engaging portraits (many of which originally appeared in Town & Country, The Paris Review and other magazines) of well-known artists — Robert Gober, Jeff Koons and Amy Sillman, to name a few from Salle's august, if fairly homogeneous, list — rounded out by brief ruminations on art-historical forebears and musings about criticism and art school.
That was the epiphany that Jan Six XI had as a teenager, looking at the portrait of his ancestor, which set him off in search of his own identity, distinct from that of his forebears: that someone from three and a half centuries ago could, with paint on canvas, convey the human essence in a way that is utterly intelligible today.
Ms. Zernowitski — who in keeping with modesty strictures wears a wig, but one so subtle it is impossible to notice — sees herself as embodying the generational yearnings of ultra-Orthodox voters who, unlike forebears who saw the land of Israel as holy but were uncertain about the state, want to feel more fully a part of the country in which they are citizens.
I write that admiring many of its spiritual forebears, from Tennessee Williams's "The Glass Menagerie" in 1945 to Robert Anderson's "Tea and Sympathy" in 1953 to the early works of Doric Wilson, Lanford Wilson, Robert Patrick and many others who helped spark an efflorescence of downtown gay drama centered at Caffe Cino, with its makeshift milk-crate stage, starting in 1958.
The philosophy of liberalism emerged much later, during the waning of the Middle Ages, when individuals began to see themselves as individuals, in the modern sense, and to engage in freeing themselves as such from various forms of constriction and oppression—monarchial rule in political realms, feudal control of the economy, the Roman Church's monopoly over the intellectual sphere—that had bedeviled their forebears over a millennium.
Looking back, Defoe's coming of age, in the first half of the noughties, coincided almost exactly with the point at which his model of striker became a thing of the past, the precise time that his pocket-sized forebears – the likes of Andy Cole, Kevin Phillips and Andy Johnson – were being replaced in the top-scorers' charts by towering übermenschen like Drogba, Ronaldo, Adebayor – and Darren Bent.
Where Mr. Trump would later appeal to the American white working class, Mr. Netanyahu melded Israeli ultra-Orthodox, secular Russian immigrants and working-class Mizrachi voters, whose forebears lived in the Arab world, into a political base hungry to give the educated, liberal, European-descended Ashkenazim of Tel Aviv their comeuppance, said Ari Shavit, an author and former columnist who has followed Mr. Netanyahu throughout his career.
I know that the Louisiana Purchase Lewis and Clark marveled at is where the United States government would shoo some of my forebears when they were spat out of the East, and that even though a fourth of them died along the way, the Cherokee Nation still has the largest population of any American Indian tribe, close to 360,000 enrolled members, and I am one of them.
We're going to have to make a decision about whether we are a people who tolerate the hypocrisy of a system where the workers who pick our fruit or make our beds never have the chance to get right with the law – or whether we're going to give them a chance, just like our forebears had a chance, to take responsibility and give their kids a better future.
The early history of the group is unclear, but most of them believe their forebears came to Chettinad centuries ago, after a tsunami in the coastal spot they originally inhabited; despite this being one of the driest regions in India, their fear of flooding reportedly led them to build the mansions of Chettinad up several steps (always an odd number, in keeping with Vastu Shastra, the Indian feng shui).
And it presaged the release this week of a new Gap video campaign featuring Rumer Willis (daughter of Demi Moore), T J Mizell (son of Jam Master Jay), Coco Gordon (daughter of Kim Gordon), Lizzy Jagger (daughter of Mick Jagger), Chelsea Tyler (daughter of Steven Tyler) and Evan Ross (son of Diana Ross) — all of whose famous forebears once upon a time also made their own Gap ads.
Nor do many Catholics respond warmly to the figure of Steve Bannon, chief executive of the Trump campaign, who (before his appointment) said rather mockingly that "Catholics want as many Hispanics in this country as possible, because their church is dying…" Some argue that Catholics, even those who are prosperous and well-settled, baulk at Mr Trump's anti-immigrant rhetoric because they have family memories of Irish or Italian forebears who struggled on arrival.
After 85033, all presidents made the effective functioning of the international order a foundational foreign policy priority — including, of course, President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump says he doesn't want NYT in the White House Veterans group backs lawsuits to halt Trump's use of military funding for border wall Schiff punches back after GOP censure resolution fails MORE's GOP forebears Eisenhower, Reagan and Bush 41, in particular, who embodied global leadership as part of their presidential DNA.
Smith holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as well as an M.F.A. from the Bennington Writing Seminars, and while her historical acumen is undeniable and her sense of the past's physicality often superb — "The dirt here is so red that it lights our way" — "Free Men" never achieves the absorbing authority of its inimitable fictional forebears, Toni Morrison's "Beloved" and Edward P. Jones's "The Known World" among them.

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