| 41. | One of the best-known modern studies of mimesis, understood as a form of representation of the visual appearance of things.
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| 42. | In " Christianizing Homer ", MacDonald lays down his principles of literary mimesis, his methodology for comparing ancient texts.
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| 43. | Active camouflage could in theory exploit counterillumination in both the mimesis by depicting an object such as a car when viewed in infrared.
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| 44. | Art may be characterized in terms of mimesis ( its representation of reality ), expression, communication of emotion, or other qualities.
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| 45. | The group continued to accept the concepts of history painting and mimesis, imitation of nature, as central to the purpose of art.
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| 46. | After Visiting Hours ( poem ); Mimesis 6 ( Winter 2010 ); reprinted in Boston Review, May / June 2010.
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| 47. | Mimesis is common in prey animals, for example when a peppered moth caterpillar mimics a twig, or a grasshopper mimics a dry leaf.
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| 48. | Literary critic Thomas Pavel argues that the fictional world deserves to be examined on its own terms rather than merely through the lens of mimesis.
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| 49. | Latin orators and rhetoricians adopted the literary method of Dionysius "'imitatio " and discarded Aristotle's " mimesis ".
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| 50. | In his novels he would emphasise loyalty to the real world, thus he would use mimesis, but combined it with his fascination with romanticism.
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