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Besides communicating grief and tragedy as a universal experience, music has another way of responding to grief: it celebrates life.
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Reed Birney is quickly becoming New York's foremost actor in a particular subspecialty, communicating the grief of average men facing extraordinary loss.
Mr. Birney's character, the heartbroken carpenter Schultz, became his stock in trade: Charles Isherwood began his review in The New York Times of a later production, David West Read's "Dream of the Burning Boy," by writing, "Reed Birney is quickly becoming New York's foremost actor in a particular subspecialty, communicating the grief of average men facing extraordinary loss".
He had also lost the ability to communicate his grief.
And amongst the wailing mothers and wives are Arabs, and although the Kurdish grandmother does not speak Arab, and the Arabs do not speak Kurdish, they cross the line of language and communicate their grief and compassion.
But even the protean Picasso did not escape from his early stylistic innovation of Cubism in Guernica: as Ernst Gombrich remarked, "It is not the least moving aspect of the search for an expressive symbol to communicate his grief and anger that in the end Picasso reverted to his earlier invention".
Families in the West who are trying to salvage what they can from the charred ruins of their homes may want to communicate their grief to the members of Congress who could do something to slow climate change, but won't.
After death, words communicate joy and grief, appreciation and contribution.
Fimmel's ambitious Ragnar is a more limited character, however, though the "Vikings" actor has expanded beyond his usual smirks and sneers to poignantly communicate Ragnar's grief over his wife's miscarriage and to silently convey Ragnar's frustrations regarding other setbacks.
But a truer solace can be found away from the rubble – in our relationships with others and our ability to acknowledge, communicate and share our grief.
Through a surprising formal and tonal range, drawing on reported speech, streams-of-consciousness and more lyrical reflections, Motion attempts to harness language's transformative capacities to communicate the pain and grief of conflict, from Wilfred Owen at Craiglockhart war hospital, to lance bombardiers and corporals currently in military service.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com