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Word: insultable (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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This is a very basic insult. The skeleton of the true Turner, a black man, can be clearly discerned in the original confessions. That Styron made no attempt to include a portion of Turner's own viewpoint in the novel's hero is nothing less than a denial of Turner's basic worth and separate personality. It is to say that he is not fit to appear, even marginally, in the novel that bears his name...

Author: By Clyde Lindsay, | Title: Wm. Styron Plays With Creating History | 12/17/1968 | See Source »

Doug Hardin, Dave Pottetti, and Royce Shaw didn't run at all last night, as coach Bill McCurdy was conserving them for the Crimson's meet with Army this Saturday. But their presence would only have added insult to injury. Harvard took firsts in every event but the mile and the 40-yard dash...

Author: By Mark R. Rasmuson, | Title: Thinclads Drub B.U. As Benka Sets Record | 12/11/1968 | See Source »

...racist threatens them, they angrily announce that black is not only beautiful but necessary, smear him with black paint and begin advancing, tarbrushes in hand, on the audience. Playwright Israel Horovitz thoroughly comprehends Freud's dictum that laughter is a release from tension. With fusillades of obscenities and insult humor, he keeps the audience too jittery and hysterical to realize that they have only been watching an intellectual Don Rickles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: Three Authors in Search of an Act | 12/6/1968 | See Source »

...that critics who admire his caricatures turn against his watercolors for the same reason. Says he: "It is quite all right to refer to Degas as being 'derived' from Ingres, but if you mention a contemporary painter as being 'derived' from Degas, it is an insult...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Painting: Coney Island Daumier | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

...there is a curious commentary upon man's inhumanity to man whenever white Americans deliver that callous insult to the Negro's longstanding injury by questioning the validity of his chauvinistic or racist mode of retrieving his blackness. No doubt the black chauvinist mode of self-renewal is as mundane and vile as any other chauvinism at any period of human history. But it is no less an historically valid expression, for the history of white America's relationship to the Negro provided few meaningful alternatives...

Author: By Charles J. Hamilton jr., | Title: Black Polemics | 11/4/1968 | See Source »

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