How To Use Epigone In A Sentence

  • During the mid-Tang and night-Tang dynasty, the aesthetic theme tradition of landscape poetry and pastoral poetry were innovated by Yaohe, Jiadao and their epigone.
  • To be sure, American writers and entertainers didn't all suddenly begin reading him and decide to become his epigones.
  • Those born in the eighties of the nineteenth century and later were merely epigones of the university and parlor Socialists of the late Victorian period.
  • Three of the newcomers seem to be promising epigones in need of additional grooming.
  • I'll bet you didn't know that, after reading Bérubé's latest post about thought,I now aspire to be referred to as an "epigone" of some yet-to-be-determined person. Archive 2006-06-01
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  • You are vogue and beautiful epigone, yearn for the perfect outline of cap-a-pie , blossom a glorious of unapproachable evil spirit be puzzled.
  • I would be an epigone and no artist if I only used the experiences of others without developing them any further.
  • At a time when the theater is besieged by phony avant-gardists from the left and vapid epigones from the right, let us give thanks for him.
  • He is no longer just the arch mannerist, the etiolated epigone of Michelangelo, perverse and stylised in equal measure. Bronzino's Medici portraits – review
  • But what ‘light’ is cast by the epigones of today's cinema?
  • These men stood for the mobility of ideas: their epigones, for the mobility of money alone.
  • But then neither did Fichte and Schelling and Kant and Hegel and Schopenhauer and Nietzsche and Heidegger; but their differences are family feuds, and the same is true of their "Catholic" epigone. Bishop Alfonso de Galarreta chairman of the SSPX commission
  • She differentiates between authentic naives and Sunday painters, dilettantes and epigones at adult art class level, none of whom is represented in her collection.
  • His decision to spare the soldier initiates a near mutiny that is quelled only when the captain finally reveals something about his civilian life, becoming a real person to his men instead of an epigone of orders and chain of command.
  • But no serious social scientist would venture today to speak of such a pre-established economic harmony, as the classical economists and their optimistic-liberal epigones envisage it.
  • He is no longer just the arch mannerist, the etiolated epigone of Michelangelo, perverse and stylised in equal measure. Bronzino's Medici portraits – review
  • I wrote a long paper last fall which you can find here in which I make out Gore as an epigone of Heidegger. Enowning
  • Can one say the same for their latter-day epigones?
  • For instance, the Feds' epigones at State level try to follow it with often disastrous consequences.
  • And the figure around whom my argument turns is, in various epigones, King Richard III.
  • Giants, the epigones of Uranus, stamp around in the cold, steaming like cattle.
  • We, for our part, all considered ourselves their inheritors, even epigones, with the responsibility of translating their German thinking into American categories and presenting a ‘new theology’ to our countrymen and women.
  • Carmela was trying to get her Linux booted Treo 700's calendaring app to work in a Epeus 'epigone way: "This means you can take hCalendar and hCard data from the web into Outlook, into MSN's Live calendar application, and connect other apps data into and out of the browser in a nice user-obvious way. The 2.0 Sopranos Family $1.99 on Itunes
  • The fetishistic medievalism—Breivik seems to have designed a military dress uniform, and wants to wear it to his trial—is significant: Like Osama bin Laden and his epigones, his worldview seems mainly defined by the politics of the 13th century. What Is Anders Breivik?
  • In the context of the pervasive nineteenth century idealism of Hegel, Kant and their epigones, this axiomatic statement was anything but banal.
  • This much is certain already: Though old-fashioned, the work is generally too well crafted to make him a mere epigone.
  • In a curious irony of history, an epigone frequently becomes better known than his/her illustrious namesake and predecessor. The other (and greater) Moctezuma I
  • The celebrated philosophical essays ( "The Myth of Sisyphus," The Rebel) are the work of an extraordinarily talented and literate epigone. There's Something Wrong with Sven
  • The animal story, like the contemporaneous naturalistic novel of Zola and his various epigones, could, at least in theory, ground all its narrative events in observation, probability, and fact.
  • The man doesn't like to be dubbed an epigone, especially of the fusion restaurants that have mushroomed in Banjara Hills and Begumpet.
  • He, however, is no imitative epigone, but a historian of the first rank, helped rather than hindered by the literary tradition within which he wrote.
  • Not only does this process have much capital behind it - fed by the deep-pocket venture capital organizations of Silicon Valley an hour to the south - but it has its epigones in the press.

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