
1) Actuality 2) Art movement 3) Authenticity 4) Certainty 5) Common-sense belief 6) Corot painting style 7) Detail-oriented genre 8) Fidelity to fact 9) Flaubert style 10) Interest in true facts 11) Life as it is 12) Norman rockwell quality 13) One school of art 14) Practicality 15) Pragmatism 16) School of writing
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https://www.crosswordclues.com/clue/realism

1) Authenticity 2) Platonism 3) Realness 4) Style 5) Verity 6) Verismo
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https://www.crosswordclues.com/clue/realism
(Exaggerated) (See Moderate Realism.) Unmodified, realism simply affirms the existence of universal essences. Having posited this as a certainty, the advocates of exaggerated realism part company from the moderate realism of the scholastics by maintaining the actual existence of essences or universals outside of the individual substance. In ...
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http://catholicism.org/phil-glossary.html

• (n.) As opposed to nominalism, the doctrine that genera and species are real things or entities, existing independently of our conceptions. According to realism the Universal exists ante rem (Plato), or in re (Aristotle). • (n.) Fidelity to nature or to real life; representation without idealization, and making no appeal to the imaginat...
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http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning/realism/

(from the article `Performing Arts`) ...International Festival was marked by an acclaimed program of concerts and theatre productions, notably Peter Stein`s wide-screen Troilus and ...
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/r/18

(from the article `Belgian literature`) Led by a Realist, Domien Sleeckx, a reaction against Romanticism set in about 1860. Writing became characterized by acute observation, description of ... ...school, restrained in England, less so in the United States, but manifest in the children`s literature of much of the world. It failed to pro...
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/r/18

(from the article `international relations`) ...conflict resolution and adherence to international law grew more distant from the existing world of aggressive dictatorships, a new approach to ... ...Carl J. Friedrich, Schuman, Harold Sprout, Nicholas Spykman, and others developed the main lines of what became the `power-politics...
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/r/18

A wargaming term measuring the historical fidelity of a rules system (or for a non-historical wargame, how 'real' the rules seem to be).
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20471

A theory of international relations holding that struggles are resolved on the basis of power of conflicting parties.
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21177

a depiction of existence as it appears, without euphemism or evasion; evokes the idea that the things or occurrence that are portrayed may actually exist. A key component of naturalist writing.
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21416

1.A type of representational art in which the artist depicts as closely as possible what the eye sees. 2. Realism. The mid-nineteenth-century style of Courbet and others, based on the idea that ordinary people and everyday activities are worthy subjects for art.
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21532

An elastic and ambiguous term with two meanings. (1) First, it refers generally to any artistic or l
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/22385

A loosely applied term used to describe a painting that looks 'real' or has a strong or unpleasant s
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/22428
Re'al·ism (rē'
a l*ĭz'm)
noun [ Confer French
réalisme .]
1. (Philos.) (a) As opposed to
nominalism , the doctrine that genera and species are real things or entities, existing independently of our conceptions. According to realism the Universa...
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/R/18

1. The doctrine in epistemology that the external world exists independently of perception. 2. The view that universal ideas correspond to objective realities.
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http://www.philosophicalsociety.com/glossary.htm

a view of a reality ontologically independent of conception, perception, etc. Objects have certain properties regardless of any thought to the contrary.
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http://www.translationdirectory.com/glossaries/glossary131.htm

an attempt in theater to represent everyday life and people as they are or appear to be through careful attention to detail in character motivation, costume, setting, and dialogue. Plays from this period (from 1820 to 1920) seek the truth, find beauty in the commonplace, and focus on the conditions of the working class. Henrik Ibsen is an exemplar ...
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https://education.ket.org/resources/drama-glossary/

art movement that emerged in the 1840s in which artists focused attention on ordinary people, such as peasants and laborers, who had not been pictured in art up to that time. Realists depicted real scenes from contemporary life, from city street scenes to country funerals. They tried to show the beauty in the commonplace, refusing to idealize or gl...
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https://education.ket.org/resources/visual-arts-glossary/

A literary movement of the late 19th Century that saw playwrights adhering to real life situations. Focusing on everyday life of middle-class, or lower-class characters. Anton Chekhov and Henrik Ibsen modernized theatre with their realism plays.
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https://thatawesometheatreblog.com/dramatic-terms/

a literary re-creation of life in action, setting, atmosphere, and character.
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https://www.cliffsnotes.com/literature/a/american-poets-of-the-20th-century
pragmatism noun the attribute of accepting the facts of life and favoring practicality and literal truth
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20974
(arts) In the arts and literature generally, a `true-to-life` approach to subject matter; also described as naturalism. Taken to its extreme, trompe l'oeil paintings trick the eye into believing objects are real. More specifically, realism refers to a movement in mid&...
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21221
(philosophy) In philosophy, the theory that universals (properties such as `redness`) have an existence independent of the human mind. Realists hold that the essence of things is objectively given in nature, and that our classifications are not arbitrary. As such, realism is contrast...
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21221

An artistic movement in which artists draw or paint whatever they see without adding any additional interpretation to it.
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/23092
[6th grade words] the attribute of accepting the facts of life
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https://www.vocabulary.com/lists/40039
No exact match found.