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词汇 academicism
释义

Definition of academicism in English:

academicism

(also academism)
noun ˌakəˈdɛmɪsɪz(ə)mˌækəˈdɛməˌsɪzəm
mass noun
  • Adherence to formal or conventional rules and traditions in art or literature.

    (艺术或文学方面的)墨守成规,因袭主义

    the opposition between academicism and creative authenticity
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She writes that ‘Black artists such as Lois Mailou Jones, Palmer C. Hayden, and Henry O. Tanner were more inclined towards a conventional academicism, despite Paris's reputation for modernity’.
    • She is a pianist who always thinks, always invests her performances with a point of view, while managing in the process never to allow the clouds of calculation and academicism to hover above the keyboard.
    • The social structure, the heavy academism and specific institutional traits blocked any possibility of learning or expressing new modes of thought.
    • Hirst's portrayal of the scene is reminiscent of Gilles Deleuze's description of his escape from the bondage of academicism in postwar French philosophy.
    • The tracks are overwhelmed by signature tunes, the concert halls by ‘classical’ compositions and ‘new music’ academism.
    • He kept the school a bastion of Germanic academicism while the musical mainstream went elsewhere.
    • I think a lot of videos are good but video as a medium is now an academy, and artists, anyone creative, have got to resist academism.
    • The homespun quality of his materials and processes reveals, rather than masks, a keen formal and historical sensibility, while also serving his devastating wit and cold eye for high-art academicism.
    • It is probably in Switzerland that his influence was the most fertile: Bodmer borrows from him to fight against Gottsched's academism, and Sulzer takes him as a basis for his theory of sensibility.
    • At any rate, the string writing is jaw-droppingly expert, particularly startling in one so young, the independence of parts preternaturally clear, without a trace of academicism.
    • Evans skilfully avoids the gratuitously voyeuristic while never sinking into safe but dull academicism.
    • He believed that the worn-out academicism of the day could be revitalized by direct contact with peasant life and with the genuine folk art of the people.
    • Perhaps Elie avoided this approach in order to give priority to his subjects' biographies and avoid any taint of academicism, both of which are commendable aims.
    • There is also a sense of joy and sheer pleasure in composing and in sound worlds which comes across, no sterile academicism.
    • But they are also rooted in the progressive academicism of Dickinson's teachers.
    • What was originally intended as a reprisal against the stuffy, airless academicism of government-approved filmmaking is now becoming mired in its own set of cliches.
    • It was about this time that Sarris suggested that the director's style had ‘degenerated into an all-embracing academicism, a veritable glossary of film techniques.’
    • There's a passion in his playing of these glorious variations that reflects the man - both men - and easily beats plain, severe academicism.
    • All of modern art since the middle of the previous century had been based on rebellion against academicism and Ingres was the painter most associated with academicism.
    • At a time when I was becoming very disaffected by the academicism of contemporary music, Louis's music showed that you can be sophisticated, adventurous, uncompromising, and utterly direct at the same time.
    Synonyms
    pretentiousness, pomposity, pompousness, dullness, tedium

Definition of academicism in US English:

academicism

(also academism)
nounˌakəˈdeməˌsizəmˌækəˈdɛməˌsɪzəm
  • Adherence to formal or conventional rules and traditions in art or literature.

    (艺术或文学方面的)墨守成规,因袭主义

    the opposition between academicism and creative authenticity
    Example sentencesExamples
    • All of modern art since the middle of the previous century had been based on rebellion against academicism and Ingres was the painter most associated with academicism.
    • The homespun quality of his materials and processes reveals, rather than masks, a keen formal and historical sensibility, while also serving his devastating wit and cold eye for high-art academicism.
    • Perhaps Elie avoided this approach in order to give priority to his subjects' biographies and avoid any taint of academicism, both of which are commendable aims.
    • What was originally intended as a reprisal against the stuffy, airless academicism of government-approved filmmaking is now becoming mired in its own set of cliches.
    • At a time when I was becoming very disaffected by the academicism of contemporary music, Louis's music showed that you can be sophisticated, adventurous, uncompromising, and utterly direct at the same time.
    • She writes that ‘Black artists such as Lois Mailou Jones, Palmer C. Hayden, and Henry O. Tanner were more inclined towards a conventional academicism, despite Paris's reputation for modernity’.
    • He believed that the worn-out academicism of the day could be revitalized by direct contact with peasant life and with the genuine folk art of the people.
    • The social structure, the heavy academism and specific institutional traits blocked any possibility of learning or expressing new modes of thought.
    • I think a lot of videos are good but video as a medium is now an academy, and artists, anyone creative, have got to resist academism.
    • At any rate, the string writing is jaw-droppingly expert, particularly startling in one so young, the independence of parts preternaturally clear, without a trace of academicism.
    • Evans skilfully avoids the gratuitously voyeuristic while never sinking into safe but dull academicism.
    • She is a pianist who always thinks, always invests her performances with a point of view, while managing in the process never to allow the clouds of calculation and academicism to hover above the keyboard.
    • There's a passion in his playing of these glorious variations that reflects the man - both men - and easily beats plain, severe academicism.
    • It was about this time that Sarris suggested that the director's style had ‘degenerated into an all-embracing academicism, a veritable glossary of film techniques.’
    • Hirst's portrayal of the scene is reminiscent of Gilles Deleuze's description of his escape from the bondage of academicism in postwar French philosophy.
    • But they are also rooted in the progressive academicism of Dickinson's teachers.
    • He kept the school a bastion of Germanic academicism while the musical mainstream went elsewhere.
    • The tracks are overwhelmed by signature tunes, the concert halls by ‘classical’ compositions and ‘new music’ academism.
    • It is probably in Switzerland that his influence was the most fertile: Bodmer borrows from him to fight against Gottsched's academism, and Sulzer takes him as a basis for his theory of sensibility.
    • There is also a sense of joy and sheer pleasure in composing and in sound worlds which comes across, no sterile academicism.
    Synonyms
    pretentiousness, pomposity, pompousness, dullness, tedium
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