the burned-out church emblematizes how the religious strife has destroyed that nation
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Since her story first graced the big screen in 1926, the folk heroine has, under different interpretations over the course of a century, come to variously emblematize filial piety, patriotism, feminism and, perhaps inadvertently, cultural commodification.—Martin Tsai, Washington Post, 4 Sep. 2020 The incident, caught on video by a bystander and quickly amplified on social media, came to emblematize a painful but familiar story in San Francisco.—Rachel Swan, San Francisco Chronicle, 17 Feb. 2023 Both Mulligan and Kazan are credible but can’t quite shake the film’s attempt to emblematize the journalists as icons.—Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor, 17 Nov. 2022 The trolley question is meant to emblematize tough decision-making for the purpose of moral deliberation; programming morality into our vehicles is a matter of deeper, almost mystical complexity.—Betsy Morais, Longreads, 13 June 2018 The guests began to introduce themselves and deliver their tales of woe, each one seemingly handpicked to emblematize a different failure of the ACA.—Katy Waldman, Slate Magazine, 14 Mar. 2017
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