Hand in hand
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- | I'm rereading ''[[Writing on Drugs]]'' which is brilliant in its [[Rhizome (philosophy)|lateral connections]], arguing amongst other things that the [[Industrial Revolution]] in [[England]] goes [[hand in hand]] with the legal use of [[opium]] as [[recreational drug]]. | + | # Holding or [[clasping]] hands. |
- | + | #: ''The couple strolled down the sidewalk, '''hand in hand'''.'' | |
- | Speaking of opium, I've published a photo of an [http://jahsonic.tumblr.com/post/45835601963/of-all-drugs-opium-is-the-drug-jean-cocteau oozing, exuding, secreting and leaking poppy seed head]. | + | # Naturally, ordinarily or predictably [[together]]; commonly having a [[correlation]] or [[relationship]]. |
- | + | #: ''The tendency to follow trends and explore one's sense of self goes '''hand in hand''' with being a teenager.'' | |
- | But that's not what I wanted to show you. | + | |
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- | On page 47 is Flaubert on his desire to write a '[[a book about nothing]]', in other words a [[plotless]] novel, an [[antinovel]] as it were. | + | |
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- | :“What strikes me as beautiful, what I would like to do, is a book about nothing, a book with no external tie, which would support itself by its internal force of style, a book which would have hardly any subject or at least where the subject would be almost invisible, if that can be so.” (Flaubert, Letters 170). | + | |
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+ | ====See also==== | ||
+ | * [[arm in arm]] | ||
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- Holding or clasping hands.
- The couple strolled down the sidewalk, hand in hand.
- Naturally, ordinarily or predictably together; commonly having a correlation or relationship.
- The tendency to follow trends and explore one's sense of self goes hand in hand with being a teenager.
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See also
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