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

When you take my arm, and we begin that awkward stately walk toward your husband-to-be, I will envy him only one thing. He will be able to see you coming toward him. He will behold you in your brightness, confidence and wonder, as you cause everyone to gasp in amazement--just as you did the day you were first presented to the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letter To A Bride-To-Be | 6/8/1998 | See Source »

...20th century authors achieved the sort of cultural authority enjoyed by Dickens and Tolstoy. For one thing, leisure-time alternatives to reading books increased enormously: movies arrived, as did radio, recorded music, television and, of late, the Internet. These encroachments of mass entertainment--not to mention the march toward subjectivity prompted by Freud--drove writers inward toward personal visions. Literary influence in our century is thus not principally a matter of popular recognition. It refers instead to the authors who managed through their artistry to make themselves heard and remembered amid the surrounding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Amid The Mass-Market Noise, These Writers Made Themselves Heard | 6/8/1998 | See Source »

...21st century. As we hurtle toward it, digital technology's dizzying capacity to shuffle, combine, alter and duplicate images and words raises ever more daunting questions for the arts. "We can scarcely calculate," critic George Steiner has remarked, "the mutations in our experience of texts, music and art in the new worlds of the CD-ROM, of virtual reality, of cyberspace and the Internet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Right Before Our Eyes | 6/8/1998 | See Source »

From then on, youth and pop culture were in the ascendant. The rock sensibility permeated the other arts--painting, film, even TV. Blacks, women and others who had been jostling on the cultural fringe increasingly moved toward center stage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Right Before Our Eyes | 6/8/1998 | See Source »

...status as the nation's most widely recognized poet. That popularity stemmed largely from his readability; his poetry seemed to speak plainly, in rhyme. But his surfaces concealed depths. The line "And miles to go before I sleep" at first seems straightforward. Repeated immediately, the words convey a trip toward death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POETS: Other Voices | 6/8/1998 | See Source »

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