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

...reference to President Pusey and the barricades was an allusion to his own use of that metaphor. Martin H. Peretz Assistant professor of Social Studies

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SFAC RESOLUTION | 3/22/1969 | See Source »

...metaphor is not inappropriate: though Boris Vian wrote the novel in 1946, the world it created seems more in tune with perceptions at a stoned-soul picnic than with the view from a bistro in post-war Paris. In a brief preface Vian explains that the book's "material realization consists in projecting reality obliquely and enthusiastically onto another surface which is irregularly corrugated and so distorts everything...

Author: By Nina Bernstein, | Title: Mood Indigo | 3/18/1969 | See Source »

...private in his passion for understanding, I think that it is wrong to characterize him so. What he seems to be about is creating a modern mythology, like Grass or Berryman, that resonates within the being of a modern person. Part of the unacceptability of the classical myths as metaphor for modern life seems to stem from their very inaccessibility to most people, who are first not scholars, and second, are simply unable to divest themselves of the bewildering multiplicity of systems, of artifical organizations that direct our lives, serve as metaphors for themselves and are extra-human. Bergman reveals...

Author: By John Leone, | Title: Shame | 2/18/1969 | See Source »

...nationalism. "Integration is like a bicycle," says Walter Hallstein, the former president of the European Economic Community and one of the fervid dreamers. "You either move on or you fall off." Giovanni Agnelli, chairman of Fiat, describes the present arrangement of economic partnership without political integration in lustier Italian metaphor. "There is not yet a united Europe. As law scholars would say, the marriage among European countries was not consummated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Western Europe: Pulling Apart | 2/14/1969 | See Source »

...natural teller of war stories. Mailer gives us the coordinates of the enemy-the timid, shortsighted publishers who at first shrank from the novel's excoriating, charged treatment of Hollywood life. He tells of his anxieties and the state of his abused liver-which, if the laws of metaphor may be suspended briefly, he has worn as proudly as a Purple Heart. And Mailer never lets the reader forget that he is an important and dedicated writer constantly bent on making his prose as penetrating as his visions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Tales of the Craft | 2/14/1969 | See Source »

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