I couldn't very well leave a lady at such a time. We small towners are yet to learn the impersonality of metropolitans. |
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It was carried out with considerable brutality and impersonality, where the victims were publicly defeminised and destroyed. |
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It was precisely his impersonality or lack of message that warranted his relegation to the status of second-rate playwright. |
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Many critics of contemporary American poetry have mistaken these assertions for an advocacy of impersonality, obscurity, or evasion. |
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The same holds for those particular settings where abnegation and impersonality are required. |
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As the direction demands, they stay on point, rendering Beckett's dark humour with an appropriate sense of impersonality and detachment. |
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I would much rather that than the cold impersonality we had going on right now. |
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Computer presentations have become the standard in many fields, although there is a substantial wailing about the attendant impersonality of the result. |
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Their expenses are high because of the impersonality inherent in their size and because they have so many employees to reach. |
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Once again, we speculate that the relative impersonality of metropolitan policing explains this phenomenon. |
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When it comes to human associations, the chief impact of using the computer as a communications medium has been to build walls of impersonality. |
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It has been said that the urban revolt was really a revolt against the indifference and impersonality of 20th century western society. |
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The Christ in him was starting to Show the impersonality inherent to the Masters in incarnation for Whom Family is a means of incarnation. |
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They become unnatural. They curdle into impersonality and choose starchy sentences. |
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Characterized by precision, impersonality, a clear formal order and use of plastic and metal. |
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You must install these spheres of Consciousness in the impersonality of the Participants. |
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I do not hide behind a wall of corporate impersonality and non-accountability. |
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Behind the impersonality of money lies an intensely personal, often compensatory compulsion. |
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Perhaps we have simply transvalued impersonality as elusiveness, irony and parodic cultural quotation, qualities especially attractive in the wake of postmodern theory. |
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The house, a 200-year-old country home and former convent, has thirteen bedrooms and a five-star hotel level of service but without a hotel's impersonality. |
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May my life of service lead me to impersonality. |
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I have always been surrounded by love, but a loving approach which instinctively taught me to be impersonal, an impersonality that is liberating, achieving rewarding relationships at every level. |
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Does the notion of a scientific gaze and the impersonality of method allow for an Eichmann in the scientist in all of us? |
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Yet paradoxically, Huston being Huston, its most personal quality is the director's self-effacement, its impersonality. |
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As one embarks upon impersonal actions, however little it is, such action ignites the fire and leads to transform through continued action of impersonality and burns the ignorance. |
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Features of rationalisation include increasing knowledge, growing impersonality and enhanced control of social and material life. |
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Totnes is a safe, friendly town free from the distractions and impersonality of city life and the ideal environment for the serious student to study and relax. |
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Leconte de Lisle's theories, reacting against Romanticism and stressing the need for impersonality and discipline in poetry, were expressed with deliberate provocativeness and exaggeration. |
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This impersonality reflects also in the play with silhouetts, profiles and shades, all of which have their roots in the aesthetic tradition of Africa. |
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The small Workshop format and sense of belonging to an important development can break down the impersonality of the institution and increase the sense of being an integral part of the institution. |
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The action is, in short, thin yet heavy, burdened with a pointless complexity that serves, above all, to mask — with music and quick cuts — the insignificance, impersonality, and indistinctness of each of its elements. |
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Young people who have been brought up in this atmosphere, expecting to be recognized at every turn, may find it hard to adjust to the impersonality of life once they reach adulthood. |
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This drove man to construct repositories for his archives, but the impersonality and unrelatedness of these records leads to the development of remembering machines for each individual. |
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Naturalism began as a branch of literary realism, and realism had favored fact, logic, and impersonality over the imaginative, symbolic, and supernatural. |
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