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Word: linearly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...Gabriel there's nothing to lose but fustian notions of who does what in music. "Interactive rock challenges the old roles of artist and audience," he says. "No longer do you have to supply a linear form with a beginning and an end and a singular journey through it. Instead you create an environment, a kind of forest, where people have the option to follow your path through it, or they can plan their own route -- they can see the world you provided as a collage kit. All the barriers that separated education from entertainment and communication are being eroded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rock Goes Interactive | 1/17/1994 | See Source »

...songs have the sting of oblique autobiography. This has been his way since his first album in 1971: his 10 albums form a linear chronicle of the heart's glories and ravages. Until now Browne, 45, has remained a discreet diarist: specific about emotions, silent about names. But this time he has been undermined by the headlines. Browne has been reasonably forthright about his messy breakup with actress Daryl Hannah, which resulted in lurid stories of battery, which Browne denied...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Songs of an Open Heart | 12/13/1993 | See Source »

This is partly due to its structure rather than following a linear course down the years, Keatley depicts the four women's lives through a series of short scenes cutting cinematically back and forth across the generations. Comparisons between them are consequently made deftly and without recourse to heavy-handed statement or explanation. A scene where Jackie, the second youngest of the four, tells her mother Margaret about her first sexual encounter is followed immediately by Margaret's discussion of her approaching marriage with her own mother. The gulf separating Margaret's experience in the '50s and Jackie...

Author: By Tilly Franklin, | Title: At Emerson Stage, A Good Mother | 11/4/1993 | See Source »

...tradition comes mainly from four tribes: the Navajo, Zuni, Hopi and Santo Domingo. The Navajos work in heavy stone, with exquisite silver carving; the Zuni in patterned filigree. The Hopi are nonstop fabulists. Their story belts form linear odysseys -- carved panel by panel, link by silver link...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Desert Dazzlers | 8/23/1993 | See Source »

Giacometti, by contrast, did not work in iron at all; every object by him in this show is cast bronze. He is included, presumably, because of his relations to Picasso through the Surrealist figure, because of his influence on Smith and because of the linearity of his style -- an obsessive thinning out of sculptural mass that is nevertheless modeled in a wholly traditional way on an armature, and never welded. It's true that Giacometti tended increasingly to think of sculpture as a means of connecting points in space, rather than of setting volume imposingly before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Iron Age Of Sculpture | 5/3/1993 | See Source »

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