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Catttt Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

reference of two verbs

Are "bearing" and "epitomised" both referring to "Lefebvrian moment"?

Bearing noticeable affinities with the Brechtian theatrical trope of Gestus, epitomised by the playwright’s theorisation of the scene of an accident on the street, David Harvey describes the Lefebvrian ‘moment’ as...
  

Top answer

looking more carefully, I think that "bearing" refers to "Lefebvrian moment" but "epitomised" refers to "Gestus". As, "the playwright" implies Brecht. Am I right?

  • looking more carefully, I think that "bearing" refers to "Lefebvrian moment" but "epitomised" refers to "Gestus".
  • As, "the playwright" implies Brecht.
  • Am I right?
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2 Answers
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looking more carefully, I think that "bearing" refers to "Lefebvrian moment" but "epitomised" refers to "Gestus". As, "the playwright" implies Brecht. Am I right?
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red applelooking more carefully, I think that "bearing" refers to "Lefebvrian moment" but "epitomised" refers to "Gestus". As, "the playwright" implies Brecht. Am I right?
I think that is the intention, but actually the sentence has a dangling participle error: "Bearing ..." grammatically modifies "David Harvey".

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