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72 Sentences With "most incisive"

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

In truth, Common isn't in his most incisive form here.
Michael Grandage, one of London's most incisive directors, oversees this revival.
So here are helpful lessons from some of her most incisive critics.
His early movies, like "Roger & Me," represent an impish moral intelligence at its most incisive.
Combining humor, drag, and philosophy, she is one of the most incisive and compelling video essayists on YouTube.
Journalist and news junkie Dave Pell curates the most incisive stories on the web that might otherwise fly under your radar.
The dystopian road emerges plainly, and poignantly, in Cult and Deconstruction of the Revolutionary Nation, the exhibition's largest and most incisive constellation.
Over the past decade, Ta-Nehisi Coates has emerged as an important public intellectual and perhaps America's most incisive thinker about race.
It was also one of the most incisive commentaries on our real-world future to emerge from the biggest conference in tech.
In 1973 Loriot, West Germany's most incisive humourist, chose it for the title of an anthology of cartoons skewering his country's bourgeois pretensions.
Axelrod, who managed both of President Obama's successful presidential campaigns, was one of the Clinton campaign's most incisive critics during the 2016 election.
Next: One of the most incisive and effective Trump critics — and there are some great ones all around the world — is undoubtedly Samantha Bee.
Of these, none is more promising than Nines, whose recent album "One Foot Out" is one of this year's most incisive in any genre.
She has offered a series of serious ideas about government and Wall Street reform, and is one of the most incisive members of the Senate.
One of the most incisive readings of Marvel's current Cap-Magneto-Hydra-Nazi storyline is from Kieran Shiach, an assistant editor at the site Comics Alliance.
The VR game stays true to the personality of the TV show, while simultaneously adding some of the most incisive commentary on gaming through its premises.
Drawing on her expertise, Ms. Gordon's account of her husband's early career includes some of the most incisive, unflinching criticisms of the midcentury music business on record.
The result, Silicon Valley, is the most incisive and eerily authentic reflection of Bay Area professional culture since David Fincher's The Social Network depicted the rise of Facebook.
What we do know, however, is that the complicated set of algorithms that serve targeted ads on social media are the most brutal, most incisive owns of our time.
Nathan Fielder is one of our finest comedy brains, and this satire of everything from reality television to capitalism is one of the most incisive TV shows on the air.
Photo via YG on Twitter YG and Nipsey Hussle's "Fuck Donald Trump" is among the most incisive pieces of criticism to have come out through this awful, seemingly endless election cycle.
In the most incisive essay in "After Piketty", Suresh Naidu describes a "domesticated Piketty" who communicates in the language of economics and whose argument hinges on things like the elasticity of substitution.
As the creator of the "Forbidden Broadway" series of satirical revues, which began in 1982, Mr. Alessandrini has emerged as one of the mainstream musical's most incisive and illuminating critics and historians.
But Chieng is at his most incisive when he's blowing up stereotypes: Why do Asian-American immigrants want their first-generation children to become doctors, but then neglect to see doctors themselves?
Especially when it offered perhaps the most incisive take on the #MeToo movement, the roots of Hollywood's coddling of bad men, and society's embrace of stories about those bad men — stories like BoJack Horseman.
The Unconference Pull up a front-row seat at our Unconference as some of the most incisive and prescient thought leaders in tech will discuss and debate some of the biggest issues, opportunities and challenges in tech.
Eight years ago, a showstopping verse on Kanye West's "Runaway" helped mainstream pop fans see what hip-hop nerds had already known for almost a decade — namely, that Pusha T was among the genre's most incisive lyricists.
" Perhaps the most incisive political commentary of the night came via the very next sketch, "Election Night," which took place at viewing party of Clinton supporters whose signs might as well have read "white privilege" instead of "Hillary 2016.
One of his most incisive points is that Churchill was able to lead Britain in the dark days of 1940 because he had been such a consistent critic of appeasement in the 1930s, when it made him so unpopular.
Helen Molesworth gives some of the most incisive and insightful exhibition tours of any contemporary art curator of her generation, and her new podcast Recording Artists, produced by the Getty, puts this intellectual-storytelling skill set to good use.
"  Why Democrats has been campaigning on health care: "For Democrats, the GOP's posture on health care has already proven to be one of their most incisive lines of attack, helping them win 40 House seats in the 2018 midterm elections.
In one of the most incisive pieces of post-election pop culture so far, Dave Chappelle and Chris Rock on Saturday Night Live school an election night party full of blithely ignorant white liberals on the deep, persistent currents of American racism.
Jones's interest in WCA is cultural, rather than theological, and at its most incisive when he's chronicling the death of a certain identity: one far more tied into whiteness and the rote wishing of a "Merry Christmas" than any particular theological stance.
Yet her bold films, most of which are only now getting more international attention — currently thanks to a comprehensive retrospective at Doclisboa, in Portugal — make her one of the most incisive and formally innovative critics of gender inequality among Europe's New Wave filmmakers.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Katherine Bisquet's commentaries on the most recent last Havana Biennial and the adjacent exhibitions published in the online daily Diario de Cuba were the most incisive commentaries about Cuba's premier art extravaganza, but unfortunately only appeared in Spanish.
Sure, "some pastors are hypocrites" is far from the most incisive thing anyone could say about Christianity (it's a theme as old as the dang Bible), but The Righteous Gemstones is interested in the gigantic gray area between "godliness" and "the appearance of godliness" — i.e.
The people criticizing Clinton's celebrity outreach (mostly people to the left of the Democratic Party mainstream and urging it to return to economic populism) are also, in many cases, the people who've been making the most incisive critiques of not only the phenomenon but the show itself.
Cory Stearns, so handsome and stylish a dancer but still unable to sustain his longer classical roles as if in single, coherent thoughts, is often at his most incisive in a character role; the baleful necromancer Kostchei in "Firebird" is a part in which he seems released.
"In an age when much of our most incisive journalism is the product of multi-organization collaboration and team reporting, it is heartening to note that eight of this year's Polk winners are the work of individual reporters," John Darnton, the curator of the awards, said in a statement.
The biracial artist Robert Colescott (1925-2009) didn't fully claim his black identity until he was in his 40s, but he did so with a vengeance in a series of hair-raisingly funny, offend-everyone paintings that marked him as one of 20th-century America's most incisive satirists.
For its first couple of seasons, The Boondocks — which follows two young black kids from the city who move in with their grandfather in the suburbs — was one of the most incisive TV satires around, thanks to the sharp writing of Aaron McGruder and a terrific cast of vocal performers.
The 103-year-old artist is hitting his mid-career stride in a full sprint—he won a Macarthur Foundation "genius" grant last year and the Nam June Paik Art Center Prize this year, and he has a major retrospective currently up at the Smithsonian Museum of American Art in DC. Paglen has emerged as one of the most incisive and relevant provocateurs of our heavily surveiled age, a producer of timely and often tech-infused work, much of which has focused on the security state and the increasingly quaint notion of privacy.
During the writing process, his wife, Natalia, is his most incisive critic.
Vox (29 April 2014). Retrieved on 10 June 2014. Al-Monitor eulogized him as being "widely considered to be among the most incisive and respected analysts of the country’s politics." He died on 29 April 2014 at the age of 31 in an accident after falling from the balcony of a Cairo apartment.
He was the editor of the conservative Spectator magazine from 1995 to 1999 and was a popular columnist for The Daily Telegraph. He had a particular reputation for his work as a parliamentary sketch writer, as which he was regarded by many as one of the most incisive and amusing commentators of his generation.
However, he overcame this handicap and became profoundly versed in Jain logic and rose to become a professor at Banaras Hindu University. Paul Dundas calls him one of the most incisive modern interpreters of Jain philosophy. p. 228 Dundas notes that Sanghavi represents what now seems to be a virtually lost scholarly and intellectual world.Jaini p.
The week after her death, Alyssa Katz wrote for the Columbia Journalism Review that "journalism [has] lost its most incisive, stubbornly accurate, and unfailingly hilarious chronicler of the failings of the mortgage industry."Katz, Alyssa. An Readable Mortgage Critic: Alyssa Katz remembers Doris Dungey, aka “Tanta”, The Audit, Columbia Journalism Review, December 10, 2008. Accessed December 12, 2008.
Kobena Mercer (born 1960)"Kobena Mercer - Writer", Iniva. is a British art historian and writer on contemporary art and visual culture. His writing on Robert Mapplethorpe and Rotimi Fani-Kayode has been described as "among the most incisive (and delightful to read) critiques of simple identity-based politics in the field of cultural studies."Tinkcom, M. & Villarejo, A., 2001.
Bruce Elder reviewed the book for The Sydney Morning Herald, and described it as an "exhaustive study of the Exclusive Brethren in Australia". Elder concluded, "This is a very fair assessment of the modus operandi of an influential Christian sect." Craig Young reviewed the book for GayNZ.com, and called Behind the Exclusive Brethren a "comprehensive reference work on the sect", and a "most incisive book".
Slobodkin's research accomplishments were broad. He was an innovative thinker whose ideas provided the foundations for many topics that are still studied today. His research and writings were infused with erudition and wit that extended to his lectures and conversations. No one who knew him will forget his ability to express an idea, explanation, or his own experiences in the most incisive and humorous way.
Biskind, Peter (2004). Gods and monsters: Thirty years of writing on film and culture from one of America's most incisive writers Nation Books, In 1938, she arrived at age five in New York with her parents on the ship S.S. Koenigstein from Antwerp.United States INS - Port of New York - Manifest of Alien Passengers aboard the S.S. Koenigstein from Antwerp 13 August 1938. Neither of her parents spoke English at the time.
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 67% of six surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating was 6.1/10. Glenn Lovell of Variety called it "the most incisive look at adolescent angst since Peter Jackson’s Heavenly Creatures". Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that film's decision to hide plot details until the climax "adds suspense, and eventually chills, to what would otherwise be an all too familiar tale of domestic dysfunction".
Black Awakening has been described as "seminal" and "groundbreaking" in the field of Internal Colonialism Theory, and as "the most incisive application of Internal Colonialism Theory to African America." It has also been described as "important" for its examination of Black capitalism. Despite being well-received at its original publication, Allen's work grew neglected as Internal Colonialism Theory lost prominence after the 1970s. In 2009, an academic conference was held in Berkeley, California to commemorate the forty-year legacy of the book.
It was then when he began to use Gaziel as pseudonym. He had married a French lady in 1914. After the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic in 1931, he showed himself as a firm pro-republican, but after 1934 he became increasingly disappointed and anxious over the social and political atmosphere in Spain. In those years preceding the Spanish civil war Gaziel was appointed editor in chief of La Vanguardia, and he was widely seen as the most incisive political analyst in Spain.
Griffiths was born in London, England, on 12 November 1955. Griffiths has held appointments at the University of Notre Dame, University of Illinois at Chicago, and the University of Chicago. A scholar of Augustine of Hippo, Griffiths' main interests and pursuits are philosophical theology and the philosophy of religion – particularly Christianity and Buddhism. He received a doctorate in Buddhist studies in 1983 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and his early works established him as one of the most incisive interpreters of Yogācāra Buddhist philosophy.
Goldberg wrote principally on foreign affairs, with a focus on the Middle East and Africa. Michael Massing, an editor of the Columbia Journalism Review, called Goldberg "the most influential journalist/blogger on matters related to Israel,"Michael Massing, "The News About the Internet", New York Book Review Volume 56, Number 13 (August 13, 2009). and David Rothkopf, the CEO and editor of the FP Group, called him "one of the most incisive, respected foreign policy journalists around." He has been described by critics as a neoconservative, a liberal, a Zionist and a critic of Israel.
I trust that your minds will be impressed with these ideas, and that you will be assiduous in supporting our present form of government.' This charge was printed by the Society for preserving Liberty and Property against Republicans and Levellers as an opportune warning to the nation. It called forth several replies, one of the best-known being a pamphlet 'Justice to a Judge.' It also elicited from Bentham one of his most incisive pamphlets, 'Truth versus Ashhurst,' which was written in 1792, but was not printed until August 1823.
The Review aimed to report and analyse financial, commercial, and industrial developments in the Southeast Asia and Pacific regions with specific emphasis on Hong Kong and China. It gathered the most incisive and provocative commentary in Asia through leaders from every ideological stripe, background, and profession. Articles were selected according to their potential progress toward prosperity, security, and well-being for all Asians. Besides free-lance contributions and viewpoints from professionals, FEERs journalists also traveled around the region reporting from their own perspective with the intention of improving the local economic and political zone.
The latter committee's report into financial malpractices received praise from the media, with The Age describing it as "probably the most incisive, impressive and influential document the Senate has ever produced". In the 1970 New Year Honours, Cormack was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE), "for long political and public service". After the disappearance of Prime Minister Harold Holt in 1967, Cormack played a role in John Gorton's ascension to the prime ministership. Their association dated back to the 1940s, when Cormack had helped recruit Gorton into the Liberal Party.
Victor F. Zonana was the deputy assistant secretary for public affairs in the Department of Health and Human Services under Secretary Donna Shalala and President Bill Clinton. Prior, he was a special staff writer with the Los Angeles Times covering business, economics, insurance, banking and health care issues, and was a staff writer for The Wall Street Journal. Zonana, who is gay, did "some of the most incisive AIDS reporting in the country and has written noteworthy pieces about the gay community." Zonana won the John Hancock Award for Excellence in Journalism and the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation media award.
These take care of all the steps in taking fluorescent images of cells and provide rapid, automated and unbiased assessment of experiments. HCS instruments on the market today can be separated based on an array of specifications that significantly influence the instruments versatility and overall cost. These include speed, a live cell chamber that includes temperature and CO2 control (some also have humidity control for longer term live cell imaging), a built in pipettor or injector for fast kinetic assays, and additional imaging modes such as confocal, bright field, phase contrast and FRET. One of the most incisive difference is whether the instruments are optical confocal or not.
In his review of Revolver, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic calls "Doctor Robert" Lennon's "most straightforward number" on the album, when compared to his other Revolver compositions "And Your Bird Can Sing", "She Said She Said", "I'm Only Sleeping" and "Tomorrow Never Knows". Richie Unterberger, in his review of the song for AllMusic, complimented the song's guitar pattern, being a possible influence from bands such as the Who. Unterberger also praises the vocal performances, particularly McCartney's high harmonies during the verses. Writing in his book Revolution in the Head, Ian MacDonald says that although the song is only a "minor" Beatles track, it is among the band's "most incisive pieces".
National Public Radio (NPR) described the song as "unfold[ing] slowly over a delicate instrumental backing of violin, piano and hushed percussion. Dylan's vocal is rich and expressive as he veers between describing the assassination, the unfolding of the counterculture, and a roll call of musicians, movie lyrics and other pop culture references" and felt the song was "Dylan at his most incisive and cutting". NPR concluded that "Murder Most Foul" was "worth many repeated listens and will occupy any Dylanologist holed up at home". Ann Powers and Bob Boilen of NPR analysed the song and identified over 70 songs referenced in the work.
Fellow journalist Martin Bright wrote in 2009 that Rentoul "remains one of the most incisive political columnists writing today, even though he has lost his access to the highest levels of power". In 2011, Total Politics said that Rentoul "is probably the most high-profile defender of Tony Blair's record in the British media, in a year when the mere mention of the former PM's name provoked boos at the Labour Party conference. His column in The Independent on Sunday has become one of the last bastions of pure, unadulterated Blairism". In November 2015, Rentoul issued a public apology for tweeting that "Jeremy Corbyn might say that France had brought the Paris attacks on itself".
Montage of film stills from the International Uranium Film Festival Beginning in the 1950s, anti-nuclear ideas received coverage in the popular media with novels such as Fail-Safe and feature films such as Godzilla (1954),Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964), The China Syndrome (1979), Silkwood (1983), and The Rainbow Warrior (1992). Dr. Strangelove explored "what might happen within the Pentagon ... if some maniac Air Force general should suddenly order a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union". One reviewer called the movie "one of the cleverest and most incisive satiric thrusts at the awkwardness and folly of the military that has ever been on the screen".
The work expresses the author's atheism by having a dying man (a libertine) tell a priest about what he views as the mistakes of a pious life. According to John Phillips, Emeritus Professor of French Literature and Culture at London Metropolitan University: > Of all the direct expressions of atheism in Sade's work, the Dialogue... is > probably the most incisive and, at the same time, the most artistically > satisfying... The influence of Sade's Jesuit training in rhetorical debate > is the mainspring of this brilliant dramatic essay, which, as the title > suggests, is not so much theatre as philosophical dialogue. But what makes > the work charming as well as persuasive is the impish humour that lies > behind its characters and situation.Phillips, John (2005).
The society has gained a reputation as "Yale's Merry Pranksters," and has been referred to as "the Antithesis of Skull of Bones." There is a rumor that they possess a secret island located between mainland Canada and the United States, which they use as a hide-out when fleeing the publicity caused by their pranks. An image of a different version of the Pundits Logo, taken from the Yale Manuscripts and Archives Library's Collection on the History of the Pundits The society accrued many names during its time, including "The United People's Front of La Pundita." Speculation exists that the contemporary use of the term "Pundit" may have its origins with the Pundits, which developed a reputation for including among its members the school's most incisive and humorous critics of contemporary society.
" He described Bluebeard's Friends as the "most incisive" of the first three plays. However, Rosemary Waugh of New Statesman expressed disagreement with the praise of this third work as "the great #MeToo play we were all waiting for", saying that "Glass is by far the most intriguing thanks to how it resists interpretation [...] incredibly, piercingly sad at the end, despite the fact you’re still unsure about exactly what you’ve just witnessed." Susannah Clapp of The Observer argued, "Churchill’s elastic way with structure and the gauntlet of her ideas are so striking that there is a risk of overlooking just how comic a writer she is, and how powerful a creator of weird and credible dialogue. [...] There is a beautiful arc to the evening as the final line quietly touches on opening moments.
Ten years later the anthology "Selected Papers of Wolfgang Köhler" (1971), the previously scattered essays Köhler followed the epistemological, psychophysical, cognitive psychological and epistemological positions of Gestalt theory presented new available. Henle's self-image as a representative and defender of the gestalt theory tradition finally comes perhaps most in the foreground in her 1986 anthology 1879 And All That. Essays in the Theory and History of Psychology. This anthology contains some of her most incisive essays on key issues of Gestalt theory, the concepts, assumptions and terms used in psychology to scrutinize more carefully on their intellectual historical background and its actual meaning. In the field of psychotherapy theory one of her papers dealt in depth with the late work of Fritz Perls, founder of Gestalt therapy, Gestalt Psychology and Gestalt Therapy (1975).
Marcus's first scholarly monograph, From Pickwick to Dombey, used psychoanalytic and mythological frameworks to analyze seven of Dickens's then neglected early novels. Marcus's arguments would prove exceptionally influential, including claims that the master-concept of Nicholas Nickleby was a hostility to "prudence"; that the abstract principle governing Dombey and Son was resistance to change and temporal decay; that Sam Weller cagily subverts the idealizing morality of Mr. Pickwick; and that Oliver Twist makes its most incisive political indictments through "satiric innocence", or a position of non-partisan humanity. Though immediately recognized as an eminent work of Dickens criticism, From Pickwick to Dombey was widely criticized for an over-reliance on Freudian concepts, a tendency that academic reviewers called "facile",Edgar Johnson, Nineteenth-Century Fiction 20.4 (1966): 399. "deeply flawed",Harry Stone, "Critic of the Hour", Kenyon Review 27.3 (1965): 518.
Chaves's father was himself a journalist, and he began working in the newspaper El Liberal in Seville whilst he was still very young. In 1922 he moved with his wife and daughter to Madrid and there he worked in the Heraldo de Madrid with other young promising journalists. In 1927 he won the most prestigious journalist prize in Spain, Mariano de Cavia, with a feature article on Ruth Elder, the first woman who flew across the Atlantic on her own. Because he was very enthusiastic about the future he embarked on many risky flights including an adventurous flight to the new USSR, which gave him material for three new books: Around the world in an aircraft; A bourgeois in red Russia and A Bolshevik in love. In 1931 he was appointed editor in chief of the influential newspaper, Ahora, ideologically related to the Republic and to Manuel Azaña, and he became one of the most incisive and unbiased political analysts in Spain.
Spencer Leigh described Parry as "one of the most incisive songwriters on Merseyside".Spencer Leigh, BBC Radio Merseyside, 27 August 2006 BBC Radio's longest running folk radio programme, BBC Radio Merseyside's Folkscene, featured Parry's music during a one-hour profile, broadcast in December 2006, and a second one-hour profile in September 2009. Parry has been a champion of the local music scene, having promoted Second Friday events, Payday Playtime band nights at 'The Casa' and for hosting his weekly Acoustic Slice showcases at Liverpool's Parr Street Studios from 2006 to 2008. Liverpool.com described Acoustic Slice as "by far the best acoustic night in Liverpool." The Liverpool Echo, in the run up to European Capital of Culture year, named Alun Parry, along with the city's other poets, playwrights, authors and songwriters within the top 30 reasons why Liverpool was culturally great. In January 2008 Parry was chosen by BBC Radio 4 to present a grassroots music special to introduce Liverpool’s European Capital of Culture celebrations.

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