Search Details

Word: texted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...When we talk about a story, the author and the reader have equal rights to access that text,” Murakami says slowly. “You don’t have to admire me as an author. We are equal. It’s a very democratic world, the world of narrative...

Author: By Liz C. Goodwin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Translating Murakami | 11/3/2005 | See Source »

...their extensive collaboration. Plus, Shibata has visited Rubin’s Japanese translation class frequently. And Rubin and Murakami have planned to play some squash. The three concur on many facets of translation. “We three are the kind of translators that stay as close to the text as possible,” Shibata says. And they seem to agree that one cannot translate a work that one doesn’t love. Murakami and Shibata say they have only ever translated works they love, and Rubin has passed over work of Murakami’s that...

Author: By Liz C. Goodwin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Translators on Translation | 11/3/2005 | See Source »

...lam—he calls for advice, as they reveal their locations and play right into the baddies’ hands. But then, after the agents board a bus to find an abandoned cell phone, and the nephew gets off a different bus in safety, we are shown the text message he received from the lawyer right after hanging up, telling him to ditch the phone and divulging her real whereabouts. Awesome. And then, if you look hard enough, comes the social insight. The viewer is comfortable rooting for, among others, a convicted car thief and a deposed don against...

Author: By Jonathan Lehman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: TV Watch: Prison Break | 11/3/2005 | See Source »

...Several in the class have incorporated the graveyard into their artworks. Kotch Voraakhon, a GSD student, uses the headstones to create rubbings, or places inverted versions of the text printed into clay on the graves themselves. As she arranges shards of dried clay, Michael P. Marotta ’06 passes around digital prints of the totem he has been working on at the site. Marotta built a Plexiglass box, five feet tall and one foot wide, with a pyramidal top. He brought it to the cemetery over the weekend, during a snowstorm (flakes obscure the structure in many...

Author: By Véronique E. Hyland, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: VES 113: Altered Landscapes | 11/3/2005 | See Source »

...inchoate madness may have energized his antigay campaign,” Wright speculates.CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUEPaley’s name is conspicuously absent from Wright’s acknowledgments and his bibliography (although Wright does credit The Crimson several times in his book’s text.) “I felt flummoxed by the fact that [Paley] wouldn’t talk to me,” Wright said at the Coop Tuesday night. “He made it clear that he wanted nothing to do with the book.”Not true, says Paley...

Author: By Daniel J. Hemel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Writing the Wrong | 11/3/2005 | See Source »

Previous | 258 | 259 | 260 | 261 | 262 | 263 | 264 | 265 | 266 | 267 | 268 | 269 | 270 | 271 | 272 | 273 | 274 | 275 | 276 | 277 | 278 | Next