But if the stultification of New York society may have prompted Wharton to take up residence in Europe, the frustrations of her marriage certainly provided inspiration for her pen.
12.
The film's contrast between the warmth of bohemia and the sterile stultification of bourgeois life is sentimental and a little phony, expressed mostly by consumer and lifestyle choices.
13.
Ranci�re developed this idea in " The Ignorant Schoolmaster ", saying that there is stultification whenever one intelligence is subordinated to another . . . whoever teaches without emancipating stultifies.
14.
Gottlieb's tenure is widely seen as little more than an interlude between the majesty ( or stultification ) of the Shawn years and the vitality ( or egregiousness ) of the Brown era.
15.
Some schools and teachers do a remarkable job of adding living color to the drab grayness of basic skills, the stultification of worksheets and formula essays meant to do one thing only _ pass TAAS.
16.
Smith magazine interviewed the Wikipedian with the largest number of edits, SmackBot, says that he is interested in keeping Wikipedia from " stultification ", following a childhood interest in building a repository of all knowledge.
17.
Journalists criticized the stultification of the scandal involving Prime Minister Victor Ponta, accusing him that he tries to move the discussion from concrete facts reported by DNA prosecutors in the plan of political conflict with Traian Bsescu and " press staging ".
18.
The silent implication of " stultification " in neurobiological terms is that certain external influences can have a lasting neural effect ( reduction of the number of synapses, reduced number of interconnections between brain areas, less efficient signal transmission etc . ).
19.
"Palisades " gathers together under one 19-page roof the entire short story collection's thematic pursuit of how women in particular are willing _ no matter the cost _ to rail against numbing contentment and status stultification just for the pure thrill of surprising themselves.
20.
The book is both a history and a contemporary intervention in the philosophy and politics of education, through the concept of autodidacticism; Ranci�re chronicles Jacotot's " adventures ", but he articulates Jacotot's theory of " emancipation " and " stultification " in the present tense.