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Realism   /rˈiəlɪzm/   Listen
Realism

noun
1.
The attribute of accepting the facts of life and favoring practicality and literal truth.  Synonym: pragmatism.
2.
The state of being actual or real.  Synonyms: reality, realness.  Antonym: unreality.
3.
(philosophy) the philosophical doctrine that physical objects continue to exist when not perceived.  Synonym: naive realism.
4.
An artistic movement in 19th century France; artists and writers strove for detailed realistic and factual description.  Synonym: naturalism.
5.
(philosophy) the philosophical doctrine that abstract concepts exist independent of their names.  Synonym: Platonism.



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"Realism" Quotes from Famous Books



... distance and a charming background to the groups in full dress.... In the world it is necessary to have the appearance of living on ambrosia and of being acquainted with only noble cares. Anxiety, want, passion do not exist. All realism is suppressed as brutal. In a word, what is called le grand monde presents for the moment a flattering illusion, that of being in an ethereal state and of breathing the life of mythology. That is the reason that all vehemence, every cry of nature, all true suffering, all careless familiarity, ...
— Girls and Women • Harriet E. Paine (AKA E. Chester}

... temples. Thus sculpture was subordinated to purely mechanical principles, and human figures were represented altogether in accordance with established conventions. Greek sculpture, on the contrary, even in its primitive forms was eminently natural, capable of developing a high degree of realism. From the first it was decorative in character, and this left the artist free to execute in his own way, provided only that the result should be in accordance with the highest type of beauty which he could conceive. An example of this early decorative art was the chest ...
— TITLE • AUTHOR

... when the professions of writing and painting were laboriously cultivated at the expense of art. Each, unguided except by his own sense of dissatisfaction with his surroundings, found a way through the sloughs of romance and the deserts of realism, to the high country beyond them. Both sought and both found the same thing—the thing above literature and painting, the stuff out of which great literature ...
— Pot-Boilers • Clive Bell

... The photographic realism of the later newspaper correspondent had not come into play in these earlier years of the war, and, as a consequence, the thousands who poured down to the Army of the Potomac beheld the city with something ...
— The Iron Game - A Tale of the War • Henry Francis Keenan

... generation who, whether Indians or British, had lived through that tempest, and if to Indians the Mutiny recalled such scenes as "The Blowing of Indians from British Guns" which the great Russian painter Verestchagin depicted with the same realism as the splendid pageant of the entry of the Prince of Wales into Delhi in 1876, it was the horrors of Cawnpore that chiefly dwelt in the minds of Europeans. Many Englishmen and Englishwomen owed their lives during the Mutiny to the devotion and courage ...
— India, Old and New • Sir Valentine Chirol


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