Word: ideale
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...typically torn woman, a wife for seven years by 1892, considered the ideal sexual routine to be "total abstinence with intercourse for reproduction only"-although she usually had an orgasm when she slept with her husband, and the next day felt "exceedingly well...
...means did all the women in the Mosher study suffer over sex. A normal school graduate had orgasms, after which she felt "very sleepy and comfy, with none of the disgust as I have heard it described." Her ideal, however, was "once a month when both feel well. And in the daylight." A Stanford woman admitted that she enjoyed sex weekly, bul commented that it served "a higher purpose than physical enjoyment. Simply sweeps you out of everything that is commonplace and everyday. A strength...
...individuality rather than conventional images. Even the royal family was portrayed in familiar situations - kissing, hugging or dandling a child. Nefertiti's striking facial resemblance to her husband, however, is thought by some scholars to be the result of artistic license, a concession to the kingly features considered ideal at the time...
Excluded from movements, Duchamp cut his solitary path to recognition. Wit, spontaneity and above all irony−the imposition of the actual upon the ideal−became his guiding principles. As the Philadelphia exhibition happily recalls, he exhibited a Mona Lisa with mustache and a prized collection of dust. Sometimes he showed found objects under the punning name Rrose Sélavy; in a fit of ennui he invented a new art form, "readymades," prosaic articles given fresh contexts. One, a snow shovel, is labeled In Advance of the Broken Arm and signed by Duchamp. The other, entitled Fountain...
Much of this ground has been fought over before. Yet Kind and Usual Punishment is a persuasive tract with a murderous eye alike for delusive penal rhetoric and abusive practice. Eugene V. Debs once stated this ideal: "While there is a soul in prison, I am not free." Jessica Mitford has the sublime un reasonableness to treat that as an imperative...