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Word: metaphorization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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What's a good metaphor for a Harvard student? A talking, gold-plated pile of manure, wearing a fleece. What joke should you put in your Ivy Oration (the funny one on class day) tryout speech if you want it to bomb like Osama Bin Laden? See above...

Author: By David A. Fahrenthold, | Title: Content To Be Bitter | 5/2/2000 | See Source »

...American cinema. The trend seems to stem from Hollywood's contemporary writers and directors, who are the first generation who grew up in the decline of the suburban dream, the promise of two-kids and white picket fences. This modern American film landscape transforms the suburbs into a movie metaphor of malevolence underlying the pretense of normality. The Virgin Suicides, Sofia Coppola's directorial debut, although not a modern-day investigation of suburban life, explores this theme of banality and the darker side of the '70s two-car garages and fertile green lawns. Her first cinematic endeavor taps the similar...

Author: By Dan Cantagallo, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: CONTEMPLATING SUICIDE | 4/21/2000 | See Source »

...book as a whole. It would take a particularly patient reader to digest the 29 stories in one sitting but an even more intent reader to manage to surmise the complex connections between the vignettes, which are often too based on moniker relations rather than convergence of plot or metaphor. Often one finds the need for a family tree, a flow chart to keep straight the characters...

Author: By Teri Wang, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Tales of an American German in Altenburg | 4/14/2000 | See Source »

Travelling by bus was depressing, stagnant and--above all--boring. I say this because I'm spoiled, and because I have a short post-modern attention span, but most of all because I am used (on many levels) to mobility. Airplanes can't be credited for inventing the metaphor or the disengaged social critic, but there's a strong connection between our intellectual movement in the world and our physical experience of travel...

Author: By Maryanthe E. Malliaris, | Title: Passing Through | 4/11/2000 | See Source »

...people simultaneously logged on to the site. Another piece, Every Icon, shows a seemingly simple-looking grid that is 32 squares high and wide. Its creator, John Simon, devised a program that cycles through the trillions of ways the grid could be filled with black and white squares--a metaphor for Net art's endless creative possibilities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clicking on the Canvas | 4/10/2000 | See Source »

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