Falling short of offering incisive cultural critique ("Urbanization is intrinsically a violent process.
Campbell, who served under both of them, gave a rather incisive critique yesterday: Neilson could make a decision to cut a player but then would be so personally upset that he would drive the player to the airport.
Her book, in fact, might better have been built around its incisive critique of black suburbia than its plaintive plea for idealized diversity.
Robert H. Vasoli's What God Has Joined Together characterized the work as "a lurid and incisive critique."
Although Uzuki sometimes presents the air of being a little slow and laidback, she's more than capable of delivering an incisive critique (intentionally or otherwise) to her sisters.
It is also what has made him so much more successful than other playwrights of his era at slipping incisive critiques of business consciousness past the transom of the entertainment industry.
Perhaps a more incisive critique of the hip-hop fashions will come from viewers who find that including them in a museum, however belatedly, is obvious to the point of tedium.
According to film scholar Tim Palmer, "[the New French Extremity] offers incisive social critiques, portraying contemporary society as isolating, unpredictably horrific and threatening".
If nothing else, Henderson's book suggests that the time has come for an incisive critique of the genre.
Returning to Europe in 1921, he became editor of Wasmuths Monatshefte für Baukunst, which became known for its international coverage of architecture and Hegemann's incisive critiques.