Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

241 Sentences With "resonances"

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

This led to vibrational resonances at each of the corners.
For when I rewatched it, listening for those 1984 resonances,
But while the resonances are blaring, the characters are complex.
Contemporary resonances are scarce: too much psychodrama in the script.
Something about cycles and resonances and the value of life.
Atom resonances are extremely consistent, which makes atomic clocks so precise.
Some have found resonances between the art and the refugee crisis.
Videos and installations within the museum mediate other encounters and resonances.
Even these stories themselves — their stakes and resonances — need no border.
It's a rich time for such resonances on New York stages.
Some of its songs hold eerie resonances with present American problems.
"There are resonances between the proposals," she said of Warren's antitrust approach.
The work shows how nuanced Ms. Mack's state fair resonances can be.
For a long time the paintings refused me, but slowly, resonances materialized.
Gregor Mendel might have relished its many resonances: indivisible, impenetrable, inseparable, identity.
Yale's Commons picked up such resonances in the century after Roosevelt's visit.
Its resonances with the world of right now are almost entirely accidental.
The plot has many resonances but never fully sets its hooks in us.
The script is occasionally too on the nose; contemporary resonances don't need pointing out.
There are good reasons to revisit the canon, searching for fresh resonances each time.
What connections and resonances might the reader make of this in our media-saturated world?
The book at least looked for resonances between zombie tropes and the comedy of manners.
These resonances between then and now are apparently evident to the show's creator as well.
The resonances drift over time, probably because of more complicated gravitational interactions and tidal effects.
Video: SYSTEM Sounds "Saturn is just jam-packed with resonances," Russo told me over the phone.
We search our own lives for resonances with the past, we grope for patterns to follow.
As well, there are resonances, in the lyrics of "Johnny B. Goode," with African-American history.
As a result, resonances between the two are often strong, and convergences emerge from their proximity.
In fact, the contemporary trappings allowed Ms. Feola to tease out contemporary resonances from Gilda's character.
Whatever its metaphoric resonances, the concerto kept me hooked, and Mr. Kavakos gave a riveting performance.
In juxtaposing old and new works, an artist can call attention to resonances that bridge centuries.
The resonances remain fresh and clear, the connections subtle but not so oblique as to be enigmatic.
But curators can create resonances that reinforce their own intent by juxtaposing the work with other works.
These are the more interesting ones, which rely on resonances and deepen meaning rather than flattening it.
And while everyone can appreciate redoubling efforts, let's not lose sight of Michael's queer resonances and audience.
"The twangy resonances of the way he sang it revealed so much about it," Mr. Thomas said.
There are eerie resonances, too, in how Wotan and Alberich, opposing characters, become obsessed with the ring.
Balint is more sure-footed when mining the legal drama for what he calls its "symbolic" resonances.
Miranda talked about the resonances between the subject matter in "Hamilton" and the experiences of Puerto Ricans.
" This has obvious resonances with the Republican attacks on Obama for failing to call terrorists "radical Islamists.
Ilhan Omar (D-MN) has said some things about Israel that have worrying resonances with anti-Semitic stereotypes.
This landmark exhibition at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary finds unexpected resonances among disparate Asian countries.
And on top of her ability to mine unexpected resonances from a story, she writes marvelously lucid prose.
There was something about the way the two words sounded to me that had all kinds of resonances.
But for progressives who watch the show, it's harder and harder to ignore the resonances with modern life.
And he built the machine's algorithm, thinking closely about the harmonic shapes and physical resonances that he wanted.
Like Young's and Niblock's, Radigue's impressionistic compositions are agonizingly slow: based on dawdling, discreet resonances that amble along.
GRAHAM I would love to think this could be played in 50 years' time and have different resonances.
Every politics-adjacent series released since November has been scoured for parallels and resonances with the new era.
The piece's themes and resonances — the fragility of concord, the manifest dangers of extremist rhetoric — are blunt enough.
But even with these reference points, the album's jazz affinities feel less meaningful than its resonances with New Orleans.
It balances the body's resonances, fosters a natural vibrato, warms the voice with overtones, and colors it with emotion.
PARELES Laraaji has been making meditative music since the 1970s, centered on the shimmering resonances of his electric zither.
Made-up names often rely instead on resonances with other words: Lexus evokes luxurious; Viagra conjures virility and vitality.
The songs "pondered 1980s America as both myth and presence," but "hold eerie resonances" with the present, he writes.
It is always risky to draw parallels between the past and the present, but there are contemporary resonances here.
Like "The Wonders," which also drew on real events, "Happy as Lazzaro" finds fairy-tale resonances in modern actualities.
To bring out those resonances he shifts the Elizabethean setting to 1950s England, when an entrepreneurial population was emerging.
I don't think I can use this review to explain the import and resonances of the film adequately either.
Because his figures lack a head by which the viewer might read personality or emotional response, and thereby fall down the rabbit hole of individual narrative, the resonances that whirl out of his scenes are primarily propelled by the action of the scene and the historical costuming — and these resonances are layered.
It's been mystifying to watch, but you shrug and look for interesting resonances, some kind of pattern in the noise.
Look more closely, however, and the real resonances of this bygone society, and its true warning signs, start to appear.
The "fall" in the title points most obviously to the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, but it has wider resonances.
Atwood reads The Tempest as a play about prisons, and viewed through that lens, all sorts of new resonances emerge.
This is Minnis's reinvention of an atmosphere that feels déjà vu but that she's conjured out of echoes and resonances.
Echoes abound, whether from the careful manipulation of overtones and resonances or through the discreet halo created by metallic percussion.
But Mr. Goebbels's inspired production brings out the philosophical resonances that run through the work and revels in its literary crosscurrents.
Vast in scope, spanning 65 million years ago to the 17th century, the series tells an individual history with universal resonances.
But I couldn't help noticing the contemporary resonances of some Roman history — specifically, the tale of how the Roman Republic fell.
Once aloft, the three main segments of the rocket could start to produce unanticipated vibrational resonances, causing the rocket to break apart.
The word chaos had particular resonances for Martinez relating to her messy appearance, wild aesthetic, and nomadic lifestyle as a homeless youth.
The parallels, resonances and connections — the ways Roth so eerily seemed to anticipate our present moment — are what most appealed to Simon.
The role is sung to perfection by Cecilia Bartoli in a staging that draws out surprising contemporary resonances from this 1813 comedy.
I get a better sense of the musical resonances he detects between Glass and Handel from his singing on his new recording.
"If the planets are indeed locked in resonances, it's quite reasonable for them to be stable for very long times," he said.
But when Hartmann wrote it in 1934-5, with a demagogue elected to high office in his country, it had wider resonances.
After that, he often used ropes threaded through grommets, which made his works more architectural and tentlike, and had several cultural resonances.
Gainza pursues these and other resonances as they travel across paintings, the narrator's experiences, and her imaginative accounts of the lives of artists.
It is in the realm of dance that the resonances between Stan and Sara VanDerBeek's work are most immediately apparent in this exhibition.
From the start, their songs oozed with queer resonances, which haven't been fully unpacked in most of the articles written in Michael's wake.
Those waves were evidence of moon resonances: the gravity of Saturn's small moons slowing the movement of the rings and obstructing their momentum.
FYI, the Hope Downs of the title is an iron reserve in Western Australia, but those words do have other resonances, don't they?
The series follows a couple wrapped up in a cult that has resonances with everything from Scientology to the followers of Jim Jones.
I trace the lineage of my own encounters with the breadth and texture of femmeness, its material and visceral resonances, to this time.
They were hard and indigestible despite hours of boiling," he wrote in his book, "Encounters in Magnetic Resonances: Selected Papers of Nicolaas Bloembergen.
Smaller quakes—or minor vibrations from traffic, construction machinery, or other environmental factors—are unlikely to trigger the natural resonances of the tower.
As the family separation crisis dominated the news, I heard from people who had been unable to watch Coco because of the resonances.
The stories haunted me, but despite the many resonances with tales from different orphanages, I found some of them just too much to believe.
"Although there was no direct interaction between Asian countries, I focused on finding unexpected resonances between them," says Bae Myung-Ji, the exhibition curator.
I'm not being silly, and I don't mean to start any blasphemous rumors: We all find comfort and order in these kind of resonances.
"It was hard to concentrate because you were being struck by the new resonances of so much of what we were performing," Hall said.
In Poetics of Space, Gaston Bachelard's seminal book on the resonances of a home, he writes: We comfort ourselves by reliving memories of protection.
After that formation, the remaining disk would have nudged the planets inward, and those nudges tend to push the planets toward the stable resonances.
He was born of a virgin, and was supposed to save the galaxy before he succumbed to temptation, all ideas with clear Christian resonances.
The signal runs through a small metropolis of effects pedals that amplify and expand the resonances and sputterings of his mouth against the glass.
The signal runs through a small metropolis of effects pedals that amplify and expand the resonances and sputterings of his mouth against the glass.
I tried to press further, asking the senator if he's ever thought about the resonances between the Hebrew prophets and his message on economic inequality.
Closing off the acoustic chamber around your ear complicates a headphone's design and threatens the purity of its sound by creating undesirable resonances and reverberations.
Even in the alien storyline, there are tons of resonances with events that have happened in the country both during the series' run and since.
Returning to his day job and covering the 2016 Presidential campaign, he begins to recognize the resonances between Trump and the N.F.L.'s insulated ownership.
Ms. Wang, by juxtaposing 13 wildly contrasting works, invited us to hear resonances and connections in the music that go deeper than eras and styles.
And in the locals who drank in cafes of Arles, he saw resonances with the geishas and Kabuki actors of a country he'd never visited.
His performance was magnificent, in part because a great German artist was embracing a distinctively American piece and, in doing so, conveyed its universal resonances.
The tragically powerful but infinitesimally nuanced resonances of "Trilogie" are as enthrallingly pleasurable to listen to as observing glistening icicles melting in the winter sun.
Recorded by Ms. Richards almost entirely alone, the album unfolds as a collection of slow chemical reactions — resonances and overtones giving way to one another.
"Resonances have shaped the solar system," said Dr. Brozović, who added that it was fascinating to discover a brand-new one so far from home.
In 2018's production of Angels, Roy's viciousness, his casual racism, the self-satisfaction he displays at his own corruption, have shivering and uneasy resonances.
Throughout, Dowell plays with cotton as an ambiguous symbol — a light and fluffy thing dense with painful resonances, variously evoking ghosts, labor, value, and peril.
So America First did have very strong resonances with ideals like "Make America Great Again," which was a phrase that they nearly echoed as well.
There are resonances in this love of Katherine Applegate's Newbery Medal-winning "The One and Only Ivan," which shares the intimate use of the animal voice.
"The Capital" is a mischievous yet profound story about storytelling; about the art of shaping a narrative by finding resonances in the messy stuff of life.
It's a landscape of glacial melancholy, shot through with glinting fragments from an ensemble of six players, solemn resonances in the piano and shudders of drums.
We're not religious, and we don't plan to have children, so the symbolic resonances of marriage have dwindled to a vague sentiment about unity and commitment.
In addition to his long tenure at Wesleyan University, Alvin Lucier deepened his investigation of hallucinatory resonances by writing for orchestras and, most recently, electric guitarists.
Before you quite realize the resonances, she has cast the other Betties as Moonshine, Lion, Wall and Prologue: the gender-rainbow equivalent of Shakespeare's rude mechanicals.
Considered in retrospect, it has disconcerting resonances with subsequent concerns about Justice Kavanaugh's willingness both to tell the truth and to stand up to President Trump.
Amy Adams plays a woman whose ex-husband sends her the manuscript of his first novel, one that has uncomfortable resonances with the end of their marriage.
The specific geometry of two touching water-filled circular objects in an electromagnetic field creates resonances concentrated at the point where the spheres or half-spheres intersect.
But the folks behind Runaways admitted that a program that's all about questioning authority might have certain resonances in this era, especially for those who lean left.
In this way, the piece is a collaboration between musicians, dancers, unforeseeable news and the text, which takes on different resonances depending on all these other things.
It is not, strictly speaking, relevant to what will happen to Dodge — but it sets up thematic resonances that pay off powerfully in the novel's later sections.
But at every turn, they defy convention, establishing their autonomy with articulations and exaggerations of a sculptural, even architectural kind, and rich resonances of meaning and beauty.
Take the work of Matt Russo, a postdoctoral fellow at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, who specializes in converting the resonances of astronomical systems into musical compositions.
And yet a fundamental and seemingly unstoppable narrative force that seems to envelop every detail in a nimbus of resonances keeps the mystified reader turning page after page.
The onset of World War I dealt a blow to the credibility of all things German, but the resonances of New Liberalism certainly continued in the New Deal.
Yasemin Y. Celikkol, a doctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania who studies Turkish dramas, said some series had proved to have particular resonances in some other countries.
The deep pleasure for the reader is to trace resonances, how themes chime and rhyme as well as Halliday's underlying, beautifully articulated arguments about fiction's possibilities and obligations.
But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country.
Following his 3D experiment Goodbye to Language, he continues in his essay mode with this characteristically discursive and dense investigation into the political resonances of representation and cinema.
A third section, a radio interview with Ezra, hints at the link between them, but the game — and real pleasure — for the reader is to trace deeper resonances.
The phrase 'never more', or 'nunca mas' in Spanish, has strong resonances in South America, where it was used in the 1980s by panels investigating past human rights abuses.
He has spent enough time in Disney Hall that he understands its secret resonances: I was often unsure whether I was hearing tones or overtones, pitches or their ghosts.
Your ear echoed differently with every note, so that you ended up experiencing each cluster as a prism of many resonances, more than as a melody or a rhythm.
Sandy once told me that he felt "born to do" this kind of opera, to take part in productions that looked deep into standard works to find contemporary resonances.
"Here I Am" chronicles their slow and traumatic separation, one that some readers will search through for resonances with Mr. Foer's own much-publicized divorce from the novelist Nicole Krauss.
My Autobiography might have dwelt even longer than it does on the resonances between the lives of author and subject: Shapland cuts herself off, as though she's using McCullers cheaply.
And director Kenny Leon (a Tony-winning Broadway vet) made those resonances clear throughout, shedding light and casting shadows to show how much and how little has changed since the '60s.
These resonances occurred as conceptual art was developing during the postwar period, and now, in retrospect, they can be appreciated within the broader history of the late 20th-century avant-garde.
From Third World Liberation movements and interracial intimacies to lived and aestheticized experiences of exile and diaspora, the exhibition showcases what remnants and resonances — improbably, imperceptibly, spectrally, or spectacularly — gets through.
To me, this means participating (reading and writing) from within the membranous precincts between our multiple bodies in the larger rhizomic field of resonances, where much is sounding and also unsounded.
I was glad to see Damali Abrams and Mickalene Thomas's collages included in this show, since I have long thought their works on paper have resonances with the P&D sensibility.
Instead, Mr. Greene's sympathetic method — you can feel him quietly listening and observing, leaving plenty of silence for his subjects to fill — allows the viewer to discover unstated ironies and resonances.
The basic idea behind the energy harvesting platform: exploit the natural internal resonances of trees within tiny artificial forests capable of generating enough voltage to power sensors and structural monitoring systems.
In this context, it's possible to coherently talk about resonances of Olson's influence in works as varied as Lorine Neidecker's Lake Superior, Robert Duncan's The H.D. book, and Ed Dorn's Gunslinger.
The Talea contributed a gripping performance of Stockhausen's groundbreaking "Mikrophonie I," in which hand microphones are used to pick up the resonances from a tam-tam struck and manipulated by different objects.
Working from la Reynie's extensive notes and reports, Tucker blends an artful reconstruction of seventeenth-century Paris with riveting storytelling, presenting a contest between terror and surveillance that has strong contemporary resonances.
Chrysler sees no reason for Lepage's childhood to constitute the subject of a play, and he thinks that the political background, despite having some useful resonances for today's America, appears tacked on.
We hope that in their current form, the poems convey the buoyancy of two voices in dialogue and allow the reader an entry point into a deeply specific experience with universal resonances.
What could easily have sunk under the weight of being a panoramic survey sidestepped this pitfall through deft grouping of artists and artworks on the basis of medium, emotional triggers and formal resonances.
Several parts inside the vocal and nasal cavities such as the tongue, teeth and lips - known as articulators - modify sounds to create different resonances - called formants - to produce other variable characteristics of speech.
" A 2001 survey by the NIH found reports that low frequency sound could cause vertigo, imbalance, "intolerable sensations," incapacitation, disorientation, nausea, vomiting, bowel spasms and "resonances in inner organs, such as the heart.
The story of Albertine's early life and its resonances in the present is interspersed with an account of the night of her mother's death, the same night as her first book-release party.
The Decolonize This Place program has been of profound importance and will continue to have multiple resonances both at Artists Space and in New York; its urgency is only heightened by such attacks.
The curators said the idea was to erase the border between the art historical and the ethnographic, and to start conversations about how art can take on anticolonial resonances even in colonial museums.
The nearly unornamented way she carries melodies, shading some words with the tiniest bit of a quaver, comes across as both pensive and determined, and it lets her find mythic resonances behind everyday details.
Publicity for the show plays up the feminist angle — Antigone as a woman challenging the patriarchy — and the Afropunk inspiration of the staging, but in performance these are not the resonances that stand out.
It's hard to tell whether close-miked acoustic resonances or electronic sustains hover behind "Bardo," especially because Chris Illingworth plays both inside the piano and on the keyboard, though I'd suspect electronics are involved.
Depicting two picture hangers nailed to a wall, under the glow of a spotlight that seems intended to literalize Walter Benjamin's aura, the work's quiet resonances of longing and absence radiate throughout the exhibition.
"Intrigo: Death of an Author," the first of three movies directed by Daniel Alfredson based on mysterious tales by the Swedish author Hakan Nesser, has an intricate plot that reaches for numerous emotional resonances.
This latter reference vibrates with resonances both peculiar and dire — a once-and-future existential threat embodying the absurdity of global calamity — absurd because it is human-made, preventable, and, without constant vigilance, inevitable.
If you have the time to concentrate solely on these two floors of the permanent collection, the installation will unveil historical parallels and resonances that only a museum of MoMA's depth and scope can provide.
I tried using a different cable (MrSpeakers is good about using the same connector across all of its headphone models to date) and different sound sources, and those little flaws and resonances were still there.
Austerlitz's trip to Terezin, to his first reckoning with his past after decades of denial, is prompted by the resonances of the oppressive violence of the past in the buildings he encounters on his travels.
As many art-world professionals debate over whether identity-based curation pigeonholes artists of color, Kha and Hasan seem to use their exhibition to bring out resonances in their work without having to define it.
Made of stained, delicately patterned pieces of medium-density fiberboard or wood inventively slotted together, these works brilliantly extend the tensile clarity of Minimalist structure while contaminating it with resonances of figures, garments and buildings.
The artworks in "Apeshit" often have thematic resonances with the lyrics with which they're juxtaposed, or visually echo the dance movements performed in front of them, but the video's real thematic anchor is the Louvre itself.
Regardless of the fate of the last rocket section, the launch demonstrates the Falcon Heavy can successfully deliver a payload instead of breaking up due to "unanticipated vibrational resonances," which is what matters to paying customers.
Yet for all its 2016 resonances — intentional and otherwise — Election Year is curiously the least political of all The Purge films, the sort of franchise entry that appears once a series' formula has started to ossify.
These ideas of the oracle and looking to the future while connecting to myth have real resonances with Afro-futurism and the kinds of queer and queered imagery that are emerging in black film and music.
It makes you see the tabloid photo in a new way, and sometimes the resonances of each echo off one another in strange and shivery ways that stay with you for the rest of the day.
The Be4 are built around one of the priciest materials around, beryllium, whose lightness and rigidity prove incredibly useful in the creation of dynamic audio drivers that can recreate music faithfully and without improper resonances or distortion.
Outside his funeral at St. Martin of Tours Church here on Thursday, several thousand firefighters listened to more somber resonances: to the whine of bagpipes, the rattle of snare drums and the thrashing of helicopters in formation.
Many Zionists chose names with inspiring meanings or mythological resonances, but agunah (the singular form; agunot is the plural) is a Jewish legal term, referring to a married woman whose husband refuses to grant her a divorce.
A crude literal translation for it might be "I hope you die," but there are resonances and contexts to the phrase that an online translator can't uncover, and this indescribability is at the heart of the video.
Thus, as Tomii looks back at how modern-art forms emerged in Japan during the latter half of the 20th century, she calls attention to "connections" and "resonances" that occurred between certain artists at different points in time.
For example, an analyst who understands that she harbors red-hot anger toward her father would need to be careful of unconsciously and mistakenly hearing resonances of her dad in words coming from the person on the couch.
Louise Nevelson, "City-Reflection" (1972) (photo by Al Mozell, © Estate of Louise Nevelson / Artists Rights Society [ARS], New York)For example, Louise Nevelson's "City-Reflection" (1972) is an all-black box sculpture with minimalist and cubist resonances.
A "resonance" refers to an affinity of some kind between the work or ideas of two or more different artists in different places, without any explicit "connections" discernible between them; sometimes, "resonances" can more obviously be recognized in retrospect.
Engaging "performing the archives, performing the architecture, performing the retrospective" with the invention of narratives, and embracing artistic trans-disciplinary experimentations and historical resonances, the biennial's five-month long program interweaves exhibitions, performances, screenings, symposiums, readings, conferences, and workshops.
Perhaps to minimize thematic repetition, Peters and his fellow-editor Jakob Lothe have omitted Miller's most fiery challenge to the mainstream of Conrad studies—the preface that he wrote "in counterpoint" to a collection of essays emphasizing topical resonances.
If its idealism is elsewhere debunked, the essentializing terms of this concrete utopia are nevertheless stunning, from the tonal resonances of paintings by Carreño and Rafael Soriano to the dynamic line and color that animate Sandú Darié's gridded constructions.
This is why I feel like the resonances with the press's coverage of the Trump administration, no matter how much Spielberg and Hannah (along with Josh Singer, who co-wrote the final draft) intended them, are a bit false.
" As it turns out, the sex selfie stick's medical resonances are not accidental: the toy was originally marketed as a way for women to check their own sexual health, and even described in its promotional videos as an "endoscope vibrator.
Kilby saw resonances between Brewster's case and challenges her father, a Vietnam Army vet exposed to Agent Orange, and brother, a Marine Corps Reserve lifer who did two tours in Iraq, have faced trying to claim benefits America promised them.
But if it sometimes feels like this seismic shift is happening only in our phones or on our computer screens, we can't forget that these conversations have very real resonances for the daily lives of the brave activists leading the charge.
It's a nifty little story, told in a little over five minutes, and though you can try to find resonances with current events surrounding our ongoing discussions of gender issues, Blue Planet II mercifully never tries to do this itself.
"There's some resonances between Hogan beating Gawker and Trump beating the establishment in this country," Thiel told the New York Times' Maureen Dowd in a preinauguration conversation, perhaps the most revealing interview the billionaire has given in the last year.
He began his writing life as a poet, and when he shifted into prose, he carried with him a deft touch with metaphor and an uncanny ability to find the little resonances, the rhymes, between the disparate lives of his characters.
Mr. Tcherepnin said that he and Ms. Schroeder plan to linger in the concert space in the days before the concert, testing out resonances and picking out parts of the various "Petra" sketches that sound particularly exciting inside St. Peter's.
Chopin has a scientific awareness of overtones: He just knows that if a bass note is played, it activates a series of resonances in the instrument, and the other notes need to sail into the "sweet spots" that the bass creates.
Kelly Moran, whose compositions explore the gonglike or clanking resonances of a prepared piano, remakes her pieces in ways that are barer and more impulsive; Bibio, a guitarist and singer-songwriter who harnesses electronics, becomes folkier but no less precise.
While the movie has allegorical resonances with the political and human rights disasters of 20th-century Romania, by the end, its surfaces, while remaining superficially unimpressive, open up as the film moves from epistemological speculation onto a plane of mysticism.
While it may be unsporting to quibble over implausibilities, which begin with the idea that the cop's funeral was being held at night, the gaps in logic might be easier to forgive if the movie's real-world resonances weren't so troubling.
Regardless of what you think of her dolls, aspects of Charles's creative process might seem familiar to any artist — to say nothing of the formal resonances between her work and that of hyperrealist sculptors like Ron Mueck and Duane Hanson.
This exhibit became refracted through the access point of 1986: Timely political issues placed in a contemporary context take on different resonances today, and artists' materials aren't driven by economic constraints as much as they bring to life the politics they assert.
The cumulative effect of these resonances — and I won't mention all of them, as their discovery is part of the pleasure of looking — is a visual echo chamber in which objects mimic each other rather than remaining tied to their intended meanings.
With resonances of the show trials of China's Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, they are the latest part of a crackdown on Western ideas and social and political activism that began in earnest after Xi Jinping became Communist Party chief in 2012.
While folksy speak may have unique resonances in American history, its appeal extends as far back as Ancient Greece, says Elizabeth Markovits, an associate professor of politics at Mount Holyoke and author of The Politics of Sincerity: Plato, Frank Speech, and Democratic Judgment.
I saw The Post very early in the hype cycle (and I believe you were at the very first screening, period, Alissa), and it didn't dawn on me that the story had modern resonances until about two-thirds of the way through.
In five absorbing portraits, black whorls drown their subjects into featurelessness; a landscape is nothing more than striated black bands; paper towels on which the artist wipes his brushes exhibit Rorschach-like resonances of a face or a body but never properly cohere.
Sensing resonances between Messiaen's inspirations and our contemporary challenging political moment, artist Susan Silton decided to restage the work in a large warehouse space in downtown LA, not far from the site of her 2015 operatic piece A Sublime Madness in the Soul.
More people have lived on earth than the tendentious nets of genealogy — inevitably tangled in the chronologies of faith, race, nation — can catch, and we are connected to them by threads more subtle, and resonances more profound, than have yet been explored.
Then she and Ms. Malone created a rich, buzzing, steadily tolling electronic drone and topped it with inexorable electric guitar chords; amid all the resonances and overtones already in the room, the arrival of each chord seemed to change the light and air.
As Diehl chronicles Louise's creative and emotional growth from Nixon's crash-and-burn era to the hope-and-change sunrise of Obama, the political resonances of her site-specific art take a back seat to the personal reverberations of geography and culture.
As Diehl chronicles Louise's creative and emotional growth from Nixon's crash-and-burn era to the hope-and-change sunrise of Obama, the political resonances of her site-specific art take a back seat to the personal reverberations of geography and culture.
The retrospective mirrors his critical writing: it's deeply personal resonances refracted by his keen analytical attention so that intimate friends, historical moments, and his own self and experiences are progressively unpacked until the reader sees how they intersect and inform each other.
There are less obvious resonances between the stories, too, like the way Beautiful Boy is based on father-and-son memoirs by David and Nic Sheff, while Ben Is Back is the work of a father (writer-director Peter Hedges) and his son (Lucas Hedges).
In spite of occasional public scolding about the rampant misuse of allegorical interpretation, hard-pressed, click-seeking cultural journalists and political pundits can be counted on to take up the hard work of finding echoes, resonances and subtexts in a big pop-cultural pseudo-event.
"America's National Parks" — his stunning new double album, a suite released in connection with the centennial of the National Park Service — proceeds from the idea that places like Yellowstone and Yosemite have spiritual as well as natural resonances, and should be understood as a birthright.
It's a worthy follow-up to season one, a story rich with resonances to the present moment but also timeless in the way it depicts America's constant struggle to claim itself as a country for more than just the in-group of the historical moment.
Most striking of all is the "we" voice of the ogbanje, which skitters frenetically across the page, all id and godlike grandeur: It's just alien enough to sound like a foreign presence in a human being's head, but human enough that its resonances linger.
Shot in powerfully stark black and white, the movie has a style that doesn't partake of the anticipated influences — you might expect resonances of Ingmar Bergman or Carl Dreyer, but "The Juniper Tree," which was shot in English, has a voice all its own.
First seen in London 20 years ago in a production that starred Michael Shannon (a 2016 Tony nominee for his role as Jamie in the current Broadway revival of "Long Day's Journey Into Night"), this lurid fantasia finds all sorts of resonances in the here and now.
True to the spirit of this project, "Little Fear of Lightning" writers Damon Lindelof and Carly Wray (another The Leftovers alum) and director Steph Green pull out resonances with the 9/11 attacks but also the ways we use pop culture to process these sorts of horrors.
Mr. Tillman has produced all three Father John Misty albums with Jonathan Wilson, who meticulously recreates the era's wood-grained, acoustic resonances of guitars, pianos and hand-played drums; string and horn sections are on call, and wobbly analog electronic tones often hover in the background.
But the Balfour declaration, as it became known, "combined considerations of imperial planning, wartime propaganda, biblical resonances and a colonial mindset, as well as evident sympathy for the Zionist idea," writes Ian Black in "Enemies and Neighbours", his wonderful new history of Palestine and Israel from 1917 to 2017.
It's the perfect approach in the age of the data dump, a way of making room for readers to sift through materials, discover their own resonances, and, in the case of "So Much Things to Say," decide which shady, finger-pointing label boss or business manager to trust.
The absence of easy-to-read meanings allows other resonances to emerge: the child diving off a pier (probably?) at Coney Island, his body arcing toward the water, echoes, a page later, a man sitting in a diner booth in Juarez, Mexico, his body hunched in a similar arc.
By "luxury," I mean the kind of context that isn't summed up or crammed into word-count-limited labels, where art is often broadly mapped to — and understood through — major historical or political registers, rather one that has broader and more nuanced resonances in public life and consciousness.
Given that any such replacement is a mirage, this ideology has strong resonances with other historical ideologies, such as technocracy and central-planning-based forms of socialism, which viewed as desirable or inevitable the replacement of most human judgement/agency with systems created by a small technical elite.
Western viewers will detect resonances of "Stage Door" and "The Way We Were" in the story, which largely focuses on the disdainful treatment received by the newcomer He Xiaoping (Miao Miao), a girl from a poor background who's been recruited by the heroic, idealistic Liu Feng (Huang Xuan).
As a character choice, it runs the risk of feeling just a little too precious as first, but as the different timelines unfold, Jane's umbrellas and the ways in which they interact with the rain pick up unexpected resonances that make you catch your breath in delight: Of course, you think.
For the natural vibrato and slight out-of-tuneness of the human voice; for the quirky resonances of different instruments; for the indefinable "something" of the old four-track machine and the U47 valve-operated microphone; for wit and freshness, and for the unimpeded flowering of talent under his unseen hands.
The other part is that a really good adaptation, like Atwood's, can do the same thing as a really good and inventive staging of a play: It can tease out nuances and resonances from its source material, so that you begin to see the original work in an entirely new light.
Longstreth hoped when he wrote "Dirty Projectors" for such added resonances to accrue, and in devising motifs that worked in the context of a breakup album but also brooked alternate interpretations, he was inspired in part by his exposure, while working on "FourFiveSeconds," to the songwriting methods of Kanye West.
America's most visible leaders, the president and vice president, were showing me, my wife, and our community that they were not on our side — that they did not hear our concerns, did not feel our pain, and were indifferent to the scary historical resonances that their behavior brought up in the Jewish mind.
"Tell me," the Levi setting, moved me nearly to tears when I first heard "The Gospel According to the Other Mary" — which explores the story and contemporary resonances of Mary Magdalene; her sister, Martha; and their brother, Lazarus, whom Jesus raised from the dead — at its premiere in Los Angeles in 2012.
Oranienburg, a town north of Berlin heavily targeted because it housed the Nazi nuclear-weapons programme, has thus become the first municipality in Germany to search actively for unexploded ordnance—scanning risky patches of earth for magnetic resonances and cutting the speed limits of the buses travelling through them to reduce the risk of detonations.
The best take I've read is from Slate's Sam Adams, who notes the Woody Allen resonances in his post and writes comprehensively about its more uncomfortable elements: "I Love You, Daddy is likely to squick some people out whether or not they're aware that C.K. has himself been accused of nonconsensual sex acts," he writes.
And a few projects by Western artists working in similar conceptual or land-oriented strains provides the ballast for Ms. Tomii's principal argument: that the full global story of art in the 2212s features both active collaborations and accidental resonances between the East and the West, and between the big city and the countryside.
Mr. Kupfer came of age among a generation of post-World War II German directors who embraced Regietheater ("director's theater"), an approach that jettisoned old production traditions and devised new stagings that often changed the settings of classic works and reimagined some of their plots, with an eye toward contemporary social and political resonances.
It'd be difficult to pick up the full emotional resonances of "The Book of Nora" without watching the 27 episodes that preceded it, but it's still conceivable that someone who'd never seen The Leftovers could become involved with the plot, which has an older Kevin finding an older Nora (renamed "Sarah") living a hermetic life in rural Australia.
On Saturday afternoon, the First Presbyterian Church became a temple of resonances — electronically with Julianna Barwick, who looped her voice into a celestial choir, and acoustically with Daniel Bachman's trio, playing homemade instruments: hurdy-gurdy-like cylinders holding eight strings that all played the same note building up overtones in a lingering drone as they were cranked faster.
She argues that an understanding of this phenomenon may make room for overlooked or ignored currents in the story of modern art as it developed in 21960th-century Japan after World War II. She also puts forth the related notions of what she calls "connections" and "resonances," the meanings of which become self-evident as her study unfolds.
Of course Part 8 — whose affinities stretch from the thriller "The Night of the Hunter" (1955) to Gaspar Noé's surreal "Enter the Void" (2009) (both of which are available to rent on Amazon, Google, iTunes and YouTube; "Void" is a featured film on Hulu) — is not the only part of the new "Twin Peaks" with cinematic resonances.
It felt a little too on-the-nose for me too — mitigated somewhat by the fact that the David Copperfield special itself went there in terms of the metaphor of disappearing liberty — but I think I'm coming around on it because it has some thematic resonances with the rest of The Americans' story, particularly as it pertains to Paige and Martha.
Given the obvious real-world resonances of the three books (the admittedly more fantastical Borne tackles out-of-control capitalism via a futuristic desert city terrorized by a giant flying psychotic bear), VanderMeer organized a three-way conversation to examine what he calls their "parallel evolution"—as well as dicuss how to take on a troubling present reality in an meaningful and productive way.
Part of the greater part of valor is understanding we need to, in award seasons and in evaluating the work of others, open ourselves up to the possibility that there are emotional resonances and ideas that we just can't feel or see the power and beauty of to the degree that other people can, and therefore dismissiveness is not the approach you need to take.
Exploring historical coincidences and resonances, some invited artists are also proposing evocations and presentations, with visual, performative, or discursive configurations, that engage with seminal artistic gestures and the corpuses of major artists of the last century that have nourished their own practices, including John Cage, Lygia Clark, Marcel Duchamp, Valeska Gert, Le Corbusier, Hannah Ryggen, Yvonne Rainer, Ad Reinhardt, Witkacy, and Yeh Shih-Chiang, among others.
Pardes is a Hebrew word in its own right—it means "orchard"—but as an acronym it encompasses four approaches to commentary: Peshat, the obvious, surface-level meaning of a verse or fragment of sacred text; Remez, the study of hints and allegories, seeking the symbolism beneath the surface; Drash, a form of exegesis that uses intertextual connections; and Sód, the reading of secret things, finding, in the holy letters, mystical resonances and shards of the divine.
It concluded, the essay I mean, with a dialogue between Sonia and me about the different resonances these images have for us—she was ten in Kraków when the Wall came down; I was ten in Topeka—and the degree to which our respective senses of art history and politics are marked by her having been raised behind the Iron Curtain, my having been raised in the American heartland, and what all that means now that new versions of the right are on the rise in both places and new imaginations of the left are urgently required, now that all the nineteen-nineties talk of the end of history is history.

No results under this filter, show 241 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.