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[[Image:lighterstill.jpg]][[File:Sympotic2.jpg|right|frame]]
    
"...the '''sympotic''' [[purpose]] [is] to build through [[pleasure]] an enhanced or new [[friendship]] among participants...a distinction between the 'hot' [[culture]] of the [[symposium]] and the 'cold' [[culture]] of the [[book]]. In the symposium...the word could never be separated from the conditions of its enunciation."  
 
"...the '''sympotic''' [[purpose]] [is] to build through [[pleasure]] an enhanced or new [[friendship]] among participants...a distinction between the 'hot' [[culture]] of the [[symposium]] and the 'cold' [[culture]] of the [[book]]. In the symposium...the word could never be separated from the conditions of its enunciation."  
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From: ''A Short History of Western Performance Space''by David Wiles "When I enter an empty theatre, I feel a surge of anticipation, sensing the potential for intense human contact..."  
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From: ''A Short History of Western Performance Space''by David Wiles "When I enter an empty theatre, I feel a surge of anticipation, sensing the potential for intense human contact..." ISBN 0521012740 or ISBN 978-0521012744
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*PPS: 326 pages
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*1825 Blackw. Mag. XVII. 679 The light sympotical mode with which he [sc. Socrates] treats the most difficult points of philosophy.
*Publisher: Cambridge University Press (November 10, 2003)
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*1981 Times 5 Aug. 12/6 The sympotical form is still quite distinctive of British culture from pubs to clubs.
*Language: English
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*ISBN 0521012740
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*ISBN 978-0521012744
      
[[Category: General Reference]]
 
[[Category: General Reference]]