How To Use Iconoclast In A Sentence

  • In recognition of this iconoclast, pioneer, perfectionist and undisputed king of the tailored suit, we present five things you didn't know about Armani -- the man and the empire.
  • More and more, African-American iconoclasts reject victimology and embrace American possibility.
  • Casting him as the corrupt and vicious Cuban police captain known as the Red Vulture struck me as inspired until I remembered how often Kovacs the absurdist, iconoclastic comedian appeared in movies playing establishmentarian authority figures straight. For todays active man
  • Privatisation currently looms in the background as an iconoclastic aspiration always viewed with rose-coloured spectacles and about which many people speak but very few objectively map out.
  • Black it certainly is; funny it certainly is, but, in reality, it is more of a symposium of anarchic, iconoclastic humour than a comedy in the pure sense of the word.
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  • It involves crossing the line that divides political radicalism from iconoclastic mania. IN DEFENCE OF ARISTOCRACY
  • It is unlikely, given Rukenau's iconoclastic belief, that Simeon was buried in hallowed ground. SACRAMENT
  • In this respect, iconoclast though he is, he is rather with the Buddha and the Christ than with the modern antinomians. Visions and Revisions A Book of Literary Devotions
  • While Luther was still hidden in the Wartburg, the first iconoclastic rioters entered his own church in Wittenberg in January 1522 to tear down and destroy the paintings, statues and above all, the crucifixes.
  • His plays were fairly iconoclastic in their day.
  • Again, like today's, its doings were chronicled by an irreverent, iconoclastic press eager for celebrity gossip and social scandal.
  • The coachman hates the automobile, the hand-worker hates the machine, the orthodox preacher hates the heretic, the politician hates the reformer, the doctor hates the bacteriologist and the chemist, the old woman hates the new -- all these in varying proportions according to the degree in which the iconoclast attacks laziness or livelihood. The Price She Paid.
  • And there's Bill Lee, a.k.a. "Spaceman," an iconoclastic cult hero to college-age Boston fans in the late '70s, a quintessentially flaky southpaw who once boasted of sprinkling marijuana on his breakfast cereal -- before the buttoned-down Red Sox brass exiled him to the Montreal Expos, in whose uniform he is (sadly) pictured in the card collection. FOUND: Lots and lots of baseball cards
  • Ever a non-conformist to the point of being termed an iconoclast in thought and approach, he was distinctly different and differently distinctive.
  • In this great struggle between the iconoclasts and the adherents to the use of the icons, the Athenians placed themselves on the side of iconolatry. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
  • Destruction is, by its nature, difficult to confirm, but all the evidence indicates that iconoclasts in the medieval Islamic world only rarely destroyed images, in the sense of physically obliterating them.
  • Jazeera puts Egypt's feminist iconoclast Nawal Al Saadawi and the ultraconservative Sheik Yousef Al Badri on the same program and lets them go at each other.
  • What stays with me as I get older are the off-piste moments from teachers with a little freedom to be iconoclasts or enthusiasts.
  • The Iconoclasts asserted that religious images were both blasphemous and impossible.
  • Then there's the other kind of anthologist, the Disch kind, the weirdo, the iconoclast, the demented hedgehog to steal Archilochus of Paros's analogy. Film Structure
  • Both use as starting points the relationships of the protagonists to their personal avatars, iconoclasts who encourage their aversion to the trivial workaday world.
  • In the past 18 years he has transformed himself from a spirited iconoclast, fearlessly lampooning the excesses of the rich and famous, into an aspiring member of the haute bourgeoisie.
  • He was a reckless, iconoclastic sort of owl who would have caused problems here had he returned. THE ANCIENT AND SOLITARY REIGN
  • Back then, I was into Bukowski the iconoclast, the rebel with that irreverent humour.
  • Mr. Mimram Stoot, who accompanied himself on the sarrusophone, endorsed the iconoclastic views of his sister. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, 1920-02-11
  • That's understandable: Jobs was an iconic iconoclast who thrived as a businessman and as the envy of his field.
  • Seventy-six, was essentially "infidelic," just as the present age is constructively iconoclastic. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 10 Little Journeys To The Homes Of Great Teachers
  • The iconoclasts wanted to rid the church of images, icons, even paintings.
  • This volume of gonzo musings completes the “accidental trilogy” begun in Blood Orchid and continued in Blues for Cannibals, offering more scorched-earth prophesying by the hard-bitten Bowden, a journalistic iconoclast in the tradition of Hunter S. Thompson, Edward Abbey, and James Agee. Cover to Cover
  • His criticisms are never iconoclastic and his sympathy never sycophantic.
  • The fiction of a tardy repentance absolved the fame and the soul of her deceased husband; the sentence of the Iconoclast patriarch was commuted from the loss of his eyes to a whipping of two hundred lashes: the bishops trembled, the monks shouted, and the festival of orthodoxy preserves the annual memory of the triumph of the images. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • They're not iconoclasts or anti-popstars to an American audience, but the pop heroes you really wish you could be.
  • Nowadays, the iconoclastic Vasan is almost an icon and his material is sometimes snapped up even before the paint is dry.
  • The Iconoclasts believed that the display of images of God or other Holy persons or saints was blasphemous idol worshipping.
  • But he died at 37, and left an idea of the poet not just as an outsider, but also as an iconoclast, a smasher of images, a sexual adventurer, a ‘conduit of feeling’.
  • If official policy destroyed Stuart Britain's important collections, disasters also came at a lower level as Puritan iconoclasts embarked on an orgy of destruction of religious art.
  • ‘Whether those religious paintings are an expression of faith, whether they are deeply iconoclastic or whether they are a kind of extraordinary egomania we don't know,’ she says.
  • In their own way, they were both iconoclasts with a common weakness: a deep-rooted disdain for brutish, clear-cut answers.
  • Until the reign of the iconoclastic Kamehameha II, Hawaiian culture was dominated by a rigid set of kapu, or taboos, sacred laws forbidding things like men and women eating together.
  • Musicians, designers, aspiring actors and other would-be iconoclasts have settled the area, as have young professionals opting for a less-structured lifestyle.
  • He has written some 30 iconoclastic books of fiction and nonfiction. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everything counts in this iconoclastic mix of psychedelic rock, jazz and pop.
  • Many of your American films center on unappreciated iconoclasts.
  • Even now, as Starbucks seems more and more like every other retailer, Schultz doesn't seem quite like any other chief executive. He's still an iconoclast.
  • I once mentioned a little saweiety sheet, published in New York, under the title of Town Topics, because it afforded me a kind of languid pleasure to kick the feculent sewer-rat back into the foul cloaca from which it had crawled to beslime the ICONOCLAST. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10
  • Zen has an iconoclastic tendency, and seems to regard the study of texts, doctrines, and dogmas as a potential hindrance to spiritual awakening.
  • That being said, it is sad to see these iconic iconoclasts exhibiting less than their expected quotient of surreal mayhem.
  • For twenty years he was a star performer at the Cambridge history podium - theatrical, witty, irreverent, iconoclastic.
  • Our attitude towards the religious beliefs of others should, therefore, not be that of iconoclasts, breaking down ruthlessly whatever from _our_ point of view we see to be merely traditionary idols (in Bacon's sense of the word), but rather the opposite method of fixing upon that in another's creed which we find to be positive and affirmative, and gradually leading him to perceive in what its affirmativeness consists; and then, when once he has got the clue to the element of strength which exists in his accustomed form of belief, the perception of the contrast between that and the non-essential accretions will grow up in his mind spontaneously, thus gradually bringing him out into a wider and freer atmosphere. The Hidden Power And Other Papers upon Mental Science
  • Most parents and teachers leave it till the end, but since you are such a little iconoclast, I will teach it to you now. THE ANCIENT AND SOLITARY REIGN
  • I think I know why my father became a soldier, a professional fighter, and an iconoclast.
  • Unlike Walter, he is a stirrer, a deliberately provocative commentator and a freewheeling iconoclast, infamous for his relentless critique of the American government and military.
  • The town has one stop light and a weekly newspaper called ‘The Lone Star Iconoclast.’
  • The people who use this term - usually brave lone iconoclasts posting on website message boards under false names - have great contempt for their fellow citizens.
  • The failure of even the most stringently iconoclastic monotheists is that while they reject the animal heads, the horns and the hooves of theriomorphic deities they nevertheless maintain the absurd anthropomorphism of not just humanity but masculinity. Archive 2007-04-01
  • Dazzling, rebellious and iconoclastic, she was the elfin beauty in the 1980s bratpack before her conviction for shoplifting and spectacular fall from grace. Jewlicious
  • Kaahumanu, abolished tabu, and his subjects cast away their idols, and fell into indifferent scepticism, the high priest Hewahewa being the first to light the iconoclastic torch, having previously given his opinion that there was only one great akua or spirit in lani, the heavens. The Hawaiian Archipelago
  • Its immediate successor, the 1999 New Beetle, is less historically significant but equally iconoclastic.
  • A set of iconoclastic monks whom the Christian world is pleased to designate as St. Patrick, and who probably early in the fifth century of our era amused themselves by chiseling from the Irish monuments many of the symbols of the female power, removed also the figures of serpents which had for ages appeared in connection with the emblems of woman, and by this act won the plaudits of an admiring Christian world; chiefly, however, for the skill manifested in "banishing snakes from Ireland. The God-Idea of the Ancients
  • Any healthy society needs iconoclasts, and he sure is one.
  • In the 8th century, he said, iconoclasts tried to destroy the icon, but a young man, seeking to save it, threw it into the sea.
  • As a pastor he was diligent and although iconoclastic, he defended the clergy against outside attack.
  • Evidence of religious art is scanty, possibly because of its destruction by Protestant iconoclasts at the end of the century, but portraiture seems to have occupied a position of importance.
  • Ms. Tharp, now 70 and a grandmother, has long been known for her iconoclastic works, which date back to 1965 and range from stark cerebral dances to grander ballet spectacles. The Kids Are All Right
  • Alienated from his children and deserted by old friends during this banishment, Sakharov took comfort in the company of a fellow exile, Elena Bonner, an iconoclast and rebel no less difficult than Sakharov himself.
  • The iconoclasts wanted to rid the church of images, icons, even paintings.
  • If official policy destroyed Stuart Britain's important collections, disasters also came at a lower level as Puritan iconoclasts embarked on an orgy of destruction of religious art.
  • The pioneers of wind energy are an iconoclastic lot, tilting, if you will, at the windmills of conventional energy wisdom and quixotically persisting in the face of difference and opposition.
  • Zinberg was an iconoclastic Harvard drug researcher.
  • We will not defeat that 200 million dollar juggernaut with predictable Washington faces or unknown iconoclasts without national security credentials.
  • More and more, African-American iconoclasts reject victimology and embrace American possibility.
  • Once irreverent and perhaps even iconoclastic, these shows relied too heavily on his reputation and weakening force of personality.
  • Then there are the iconoclasts: people who watch these shows alone and prefer nothing in the way of human involvement.
  • The poor guy's Directory listing describes him as an "award winning designer and iconoclast butthead."
  • Today, the 22-year-old admits that she is inspired by iconoclasts such as Balenciaga, Vivienne Westwood and Junya Watanabe, but enjoys a whole spectrum of designers.
  • What the iconoclast may see as simpleminded dogma or group-think boosterism is also the very drive that allows a group of people to move in the same direction and achieve things larger than their individual selves. Inkblurt · The power of naming
  • Two of the boldest American iconoclasts were film-maker John Ford and classical composer Aaron Copland.
  • If Alceste truly yearns to be an iconoclast might he not find it more daring to abjure such grottiness? Home | Mail Online
  • That iconoclastic culture rejects the seductions of the representational.
  • Although sacred images were potentially idolatrous, Luther refused to condone the purge and instead counter-accused the iconoclasts by affirming the impossibility of an image-less faith.
  • Today his message is more austere, more profound and more iconoclastic than ever.
  • Wd very much have thought Toby was aiming for iconoclastic, not iconic, also unforced or unfocused? AND GOD CREATED THE AU PAIR
  • But not in Luther's Germany: alarmed by the extremism of the iconoclasts, Luther shifted from indifference to pictures, to positive approval of them.
  • Again, like today's, its doings were chronicled by an irreverent, iconoclastic press eager for celebrity gossip and social scandal.
  • I always thought of bloggers as being kind of quirky individualists, iconoclasts.
  • So despite its essentially iconoclastic, subversive nature, photography permits, even encourages, the sporadic establishment of canons, traditions, and an academical standardization of ideas.
  • Privatisation currently looms in the background as an iconoclastic aspiration always viewed with rose-coloured spectacles and about which many people speak but very few objectively map out.
  • Moving even farther away from structural priorities, Russell Jacoby criticizes “blueprint” utopias for their authoritarian prescriptiveness and recovers an “iconoclastic” utopia tradition rooted in Romantic philosophies and Jewish mysticism and exemplified by Ernst Bloch. Utopianism and Joanna Baillie: A Preface to Converging Revolutions
  • MCCAIN: All my life I have been iconoclastic -- and not a conformer, whether it would be in high school, or the Naval Academy, or in the Navy. Why Courage Matters: The Way to a Braver Life
  • In his last words on Sadat, the author describes him as ‘a visionary, an iconoclast, a maverick, and a gambler’.
  • Like the well-known Garden Sculpture, Ruin has grown with each installation, helped by friends, a reprise of Roth's freewheeling, iconoclastic process.
  • There are politicians who do not follow these currents, and journalists too, but they tend to be iconoclasts, rebels, not the leaders of opinion.
  • Significantly, Hippocrates was the only author in the medical canon to be appreciated even by the iconoclastic iatrochemists.
  • This way, the organization could live up to its self-professed image: the doughty defenders of brave iconoclasts bucking the establishment.
  • `Intelligent, quick-witted, attractive, and something of an iconoclast, which at her age is right and proper. A QUESTION OF PRINCIPLE
  • It may belong in its iconoclastic period, the Sixties, but its subversive attack on state institutions rings as true as ever in our era of spin.
  • Rogers, an iconoclast in architecture, is sometimes described as putting the insides of buildings on the outside.
  • the orientation of an iconoclast.
  • Koerner uses it to illustrate Luther's condemnation of iconoclasts - fellow Protestants who destroyed ‘idolatrous’ art.
  • From the earliest days of Dada, Duchamp's iconoclastic vision had been at the forefront of the avant-garde.
  • I thought he was very handsome, tragic and iconoclastic.
  • Rogers, an iconoclast in architecture, is sometimes described as putting the insides of buildings on the outside.
  • The story basically writes itself: bad-boy aristocrat shakes things up on the eve of the French Revolution with his naughty tell-all books and iconoclastic philosophical treatises.
  • Illustration: Matias Vigliano Play Previous: Big-Shot Game Designer Crafts Interactive Art After Hours In 1986, when DC released Batman: The Dark Knight Returns , Frank Miller's bleak, brutal reclamation of Batman's id, I had no use for revisionist superheroes and iconoclastic countermyth. Scott Brown on Dark Superheroes and Childish Action Figures
  • Moore's Prinicipia Ethica, focusing on the relationship of morals to the two features, iconoclast and experimental, of "the new biography".
  • The first performance of the iconoclastic composition caused a tremendous hullabaloo in the audience.
  • Wolfe's theories were revolutionary and iconoclastic.
  • Their works seem to be bitter, critical, rebellious, iconoclastic, experimental, often absurd, more often misdirected.
  • After the iconoclasts lost favour, and the church once again accepted icons, the painting rose from the depths.
  • Although the family returned to England in 1933 (after a brief spell in Burma), Spike retained the sensibility of an outsider, an iconoclast and a rebel.
  • Appalled by his indolence, gaming, and iconoclastic opinions, his psychology professor tried to catechize him: ‘Tut, tut, what does Saint Paul say, Mr. Crane?’
  • Then there were the iconoclasts who dropped by to flip through the books about a man who, in a famous speech in 1929, had declared that no religious organisation could lead man to the ultimate truth.
  • You get the sense that you were surrounded by idiosyncratic and iconoclastic people.
  • Murdoch said the energy of the iconoclastic and unconventional should not be curbed, adding: When the upstart is too successful, somehow the old interests surface, and restrictions on growth are proposed or imposed. Rupert Murdoch uses Margaret Thatcher lecture for a display of power
  • Interestingly, the iconoclasts and the anti-iconoclasts share many assumptions about the power of architecture; they are part of a broader consensus that assumes that architecture can transform society.
  • John Kenneth Galbraith, the iconoclastic economist, teacher and diplomat, died Saturday at a hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was 97.
  • Constantinople, but, in the second Iconoclastic persecution, he seems to have felt no vocation for confessorship, and went to Rome. Hymns of the Eastern Church
  • Rogers, an iconoclast in architecture, is sometimes described as putting the insides of buildings on the outside.
  • Ulysses recently has drawn the fire of literary iconoclasts.

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