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Word: insularly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Walsh thinks it "very important that a critic not be insular about his subject," and to that end, tries to vary his musical diet with as many plays, books and movies as possible. Says he: "The biggest problem in our musical culture today is the nonacceptance by the public of new 'classical' music. Music is too often thought of as the most arcane and forbidding of the arts, when it is, in fact, as exciting and immediate as the latest movie or the newest novel. Because music is a nonverbal, nonvisual art, it has the power to move...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Dec. 21, 1981 | 12/21/1981 | See Source »

...narrator, Brinnin exposes trivial in themselves, yet typical either of the emerging post-war, trans-Atlantic scene or of an insular, archaic Europe. He tracks his subjects by correspondencv and word of mouth, but stays unobtrusive. Touring America with the French photographer Cartier-Bresson, before the latter is discovered; meeting Eliot in the last years of the poet's life; paying court to Elizabeth Bowen and the Sitwells at a time when their eccentricities far exceeded their faded talents--he watches them with clinical detachment, in the throes of past and irretrievable success or in the pangs preceding recognition...

Author: By Laura K. Jereski, | Title: Six Characters In Search | 10/15/1981 | See Source »

...assembled to enjoy the hospitality of their host, Sir Randolph Nettleby, and three days of partying and shooting in the crisp fall weather. The month is October and the year is 1913. A novel set in this place and time automatically creates a reserve of ready-made poignancy: the insular, comfortable people of the period had no idea what the guns of August 1914 would bring. But Author Isabel Colegate does not exploit this sentiment. The coming Great War is, naturally, a fact of which her characters are unaware, and so, except for a few vague anxieties, they cannot think...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Summer Reading | 7/6/1981 | See Source »

...fiercely proud, tribally insular Afrikaner elite faces an increasingly irreconcilable dilemma: how to avoid massive civil unrest and bloodshed without relinquishing at least some power to the overwhelmingly nonwhite majority. The 2½-year-old government of Prime Minister P.W. Botha, 65, has tried to make a beginning by limiting discriminatory practices like segregation at public facilities, lifting bans against mixed sports and recognizing some black trade unions. But even these tentative reforms have angered many whites and set off a spasm of soul searching over the future course of the country that provides so much chromium, manganese, platinum...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: Specter at the Celebration | 6/15/1981 | See Source »

...interesting case. Saroyan was born in Fresno, son of Armenian refugees who fled the Turkish massacres at the beginning of the century. He knew the wrench of separation and the insular poverty of California's little Armenias: Saroyan's early years were spent in an orphanage after his father died and his mother had to work full time. Like the young bringer of good news and bad in his screenplay turned novel The Human Comedy, Saroyan began his working life as a telegraph boy. When his short story The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Hello Out There | 6/1/1981 | See Source »

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