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Word: gothically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...dynamic fountainhead of the biggest, most sustained comeback that any European nation has made from World War II ashes. Germany has had its economic miracle, and France its postwar resurgence; both are still prospering but at a slightly slower pace. North Italy has sustained its boom. In Milan the Gothic finials of the renowned duomo now have to fight for recognition against a skyline of striking new skyscrapers. From the Piazza del Duomo rises the bedlam that only Italian traffic can generate. In front of the cathedral's stately bronze doors Milan is digging an entrance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Italy's Booming North: Land of Autocratic, Energetic Business Giants | 1/12/1962 | See Source »

...SCIENCE PAVILION, six buildings enclosing a courtyard full of "space Gothic" arches and scientific exhibits. One. the "spacearium," jointly sponsored by the Federal Government and Boeing Aircraft Co., will give visitors a realistic "trip" through the cosmos, and is expected to become the most popular single exhibit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Washington: Come to the Fair | 12/29/1961 | See Source »

...into Japanese images, Shakespeare's lords into Japanese barons. Even in Shakespeare's plot, Kurosawa has condensed detail, juggled scenes, chucked the sentimental excrescences-among them, thank heaven, the soap-operatic murder of poor little Baby Macduff. Kurosawa's intention is plainly to hack off the Gothic foliage of Shakespeare's fancy and compress his tale into that traditional form of Japanese theater known as noh. As in those vast dance-dramas of destiny, Kurosawa's actors run to the grand mythological gesture, speak in noble recitative, and are accompanied by a queer, irrelevant commentary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Kurosawa's Macbeth | 12/1/1961 | See Source »

...less malice than sense of metier. As Beau Brummell dressed for future ages, or Lucullus dined, Walpole peered into corners. But he had, too, his more special, often laborious pursuits: Strawberry Hill, the house he built to his own design at Twickenham, virtually ushered in Britain's Gothic Revival, as his novel The Castle of Otranto set going that revival in fiction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Tottering into Vogue | 11/24/1961 | See Source »

Guided Tour. As a weathercock of taste, Walpole is more gilded than dependable. It soon becomes clear that he cultivates lesser things at the expense of greater ones, that his feeling for Gothic is really a love of the exotic, that his sense of the visionary is in essence a taste for the lurid, that Heaven for him is hardly more than a garden and Hell hardly more than a grotto. It was not so much that Walpole couldn't penetrate Dr. Johnson's mind as that he couldn't stomach his manners. Boswell, despite his talents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Tottering into Vogue | 11/24/1961 | See Source »

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