pastiche 的定义
- a literary, musical, or artistic piece consisting wholly or chiefly of motifs or techniques borrowed from one or more sources.
- an incongruous combination of materials, forms, motifs, etc., taken from different sources; hodgepodge.
pastiche 近义词
work of art formed from disparate sources
pastiche 的近义词 14 个
- collage
- compilation
- hodgepodge
- reproduction
- assortment
- collection
- copy
- imitation
- paste-up
- patchwork
- potpourri
- synthesis
- mishmosh
- reappropriation
pastiche 的反义词 1 个
更多pastiche例句
- Best of all are original songs that range from the devilishly catchy “Famous 5eva” to note-perfect Simon & Garfunkel pastiche “New York Lonely Boy.”
- He correctly identified it as “a Victorian pastiche” worth just a few thousand dollars.
- Each new chapter pushes the pastiche forward roughly a decade in television history, and you feel that momentum.
- He tentatively suggested that the text is a pastiche compiled by a modern forger with an elementary grasp of Coptic.
- And then he sort of collapsed it into a rise of fascism, and SS pastiche groups.
- Instead, we have irony, allusion, meta commentary, fragmentation, parody, and pastiche.
- I do not seek out the redundant, the pastiche, or the formulaic.
- The clothes, however, were a chaotic pastiche of fur and glitter assembled in inelegant ways.
- If it bear the distinct marks of being a Neo-platonic pastiche, we may reject it without hesitation.
- To restore it is to annihilate the work of centuries, to recompose an ordinary pastiche with no clat.
- They have rarely succeeded in getting very close to them without mere archaic pastiche.
- It is an interesting study to divide the pastiche from the real.
- This poem is written as a folk-story, in the style of the Byliny, and it in no way resembles a pastiche.