Word: texted
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...party about a bloody historical event, especially when it reflected their ignorance of it,” says AAWA Co-Founder and Co-President Deborah Y. Ho ’07. “They were having a party in support of the Boxers, but underneath [the main text of the invitation], they reprinted a Japanese inscription from a memorial for a group that had helped suppress the Boxers. It was really culturally mixed up.” AAWA members discussed changing the name of the party with the Fox’s president at the time, and began contacting...
...choice for dissenters the world over not only due to their low cost and high quantity production rates, but also because “they enable the free flow of images and ideas to a wide-ranging public,” according to the show’s text. Or, in the slightly more crude language of the 1960s underground student newspaper the Old Mole—several issues of which are included in the show—because you can print protest on media including a “t-shirt, jacket, poster, your...
...ignore on her debut, now seems to channel a world even further afield. Similarly elfin in appearance, Newsom echoes both the futuristic and the ancient at once, her willingness to look backwards setting her apart from her Icelandic contemporary. The poetry of all five songs is astonishing. The text is more complex—at least formally—than even Bob Dylan. Where he weaved stories on an intricate but predictable meter, Newsom spins an ever-evolving sequence of rhyme schemes. In “Emily,” she paints an organic tale of a dying kingdom...
...it’s time to move on to the explication (you will probably want to use the word “explication” in your paper). To start, put the texts in “dialogue” with one another. You only read one text? Put it into dialogue with previous readings, with the sole lecture you’ve been to, or with Karl Marx/Jacques Derrida/Ferdinand de Saussure (choose one). Hell, put it into dialogue with itself. The more ridiculous the comparison, the more explication you’ll need to justify it, and the closer...
...Swan Lake,” the classical ballet from which Sharp’s text takes its title, figures prominently throughout the individual stories as a metaphor for the resolution of conflicting human desires through the formalized tensions of dance...