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Word: cynicisms (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...think she's based on the part of me that is an outsider, but because I've always been this company person, I've never really been able to play that cynic card. I wouldn't be so stupid as to do that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Between the Lines with Kate White | 7/30/2005 | See Source »

...world view is devoutly frosty. "Sometimes," he tells her, "I look at my voluntary isolation and think I'm in Hell. That I'm already dead, though I don't know it. My life has been shit. A thoroughly meaningless, idiotic life." Looking at the old cynic, Marianne can't help smiling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: That Old Feeling: To Liv With Bergman | 7/10/2005 | See Source »

...equal time to each point of view. The believer is Mother Miriam Ruth (Anne Bancroft), head of a convent of cloistered nuns, whose young charge Sister Agnes (Meg Tilly) has been accused of strangling with its umbilical cord a baby to whom she had secretly given birth. The troubled cynic is Martha Livingston (Jane Fonda), a lapsed-Catholic psychiatrist determined to discover if Agnes is mad or a murderer, a harlot or a modern saint. The outsider is the moviegoer, who can have a pretty grand time monitoring a tug of wills between the mother superior and the shrink, while...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: A Theological Tug of Wills: AGNES OF GOD | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...author is not an especially convincing cynic. His sustained interest is in power and reputation in the literary world. He yearns to be "a real great writer," not a "fake great man" like his father, Harold Spender, a journalist, biographer and author of books on government and mountaineering. Sir Stephen addressed the issue in his poem The Public Son of a Public Man: "When a child, my dreams rode on your wishes,/ I was your son, high on your horse,/ My mind a top whipped by the lashes/ Of your rhetoric, windy of course." Auden cut a more attractive father...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Confessions of a Public Son, JOURNALS: 1939-1983 | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...cynic might suppose that university professors are well protected from the public repercussions of their statements. Far better protected, say, than a university president, whose job security is far from assured, and whose decade-old memos from a previous job are still considered a worthwhile topic at Faculty meetings. (“We do not fear open give-and-take about anything you might have said,” Skocpol told Summers, while at the same time decrying the public criticism of professors—i.e., open give-and-take about something she might have said...

Author: By Stephen E. Sachs, | Title: FOCUS: We Are Not Spineless | 2/18/2005 | See Source »

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