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The politics of neo-classicism
1989Coriolanus was written during the early years of the formation of English neo-classicism, when Ben Jonson and others explored what use could be made of the classics for improving literary style, understanding human nature and political wisdom. The neo-classicism of the Stuart period was not merely cultural — architecture, literature and portraiture in ...
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Tempo, 1962
Stravinsky himself has argued that neo-classicism embraced not only his own works but those of his great contemporaries: “Every age,” he observes, “is a historical unity. It may never appear as anything but either/or to its partisan contemporaries, of course, but semblance is gradual, and in time either and or come to be components of the same thing ...
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Stravinsky himself has argued that neo-classicism embraced not only his own works but those of his great contemporaries: “Every age,” he observes, “is a historical unity. It may never appear as anything but either/or to its partisan contemporaries, of course, but semblance is gradual, and in time either and or come to be components of the same thing ...
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The Vitality of Plecnik’s Neo-Classicism
2010Much has already been written about Plecnik. Thinking far back, Altenberg sang his praises to Zacherl House and newspapers have published many an article. Then there are books on Plecnik, of which the first, written by Strajnic and published in Zagreb soon after the war, even today seems the best in terms of its concept and its exquisite beauty.
Aleš Vodopivec, Rok Šnidaršič
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1988
The marginalist writings of Jevons [1871], Walras [1874], and Menger [1871], early in the decade of the 1870s, represent the beginnings of the neo-classical paradigmatic shift from the classical orthodoxy of Smith, Ricardo, Mill, Marx, and others, whose work represents the thesis to which the triumvirate who compose the ‘‘marginal revolution” of the ...
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The marginalist writings of Jevons [1871], Walras [1874], and Menger [1871], early in the decade of the 1870s, represent the beginnings of the neo-classical paradigmatic shift from the classical orthodoxy of Smith, Ricardo, Mill, Marx, and others, whose work represents the thesis to which the triumvirate who compose the ‘‘marginal revolution” of the ...
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Neo-classical microeconomics has dominated economics as a school of thought since the end of the nineteenth century. Seen as the ‘orthodox’ school, it has been challenged by many of the newer schools that have been developed since, but none has succeeded in supplanting neo-classical microeconomic theory as the foundation stone of economics.
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