pastiche
nounEtymology
Via French pastiche, from Italian pasticcio (“pie, something blended”), from Vulgar Latin *pastīcius, from Late Latin pasta (“dough, pastry cake, paste”), from Ancient Greek παστά (pastá, “barley porridge”), from παστός (pastós, “sprinkled with salt”). Doublet of pasticcio.
- derived from παστά
- derived from pasta
- derived from *pastīcius✻
- derived from pasticcio
- borrowed from pastiche
Definitions
A work of art, drama, literature, music, or architecture that imitates the work of a…
A work of art, drama, literature, music, or architecture that imitates the work of a previous artist, usually in a positive or neutral way.
- He argued that the failure of the future was constitutive of a postmodern cultural scene which, as he correctly prophesied, would become dominated by pastiche and revivalism.
A musical medley, typically quoting other works.
An incongruous mixture
An incongruous mixture; a hodgepodge.
- This supposed research paper is a pastiche of passages from unrelated sources.
- The house failed to attract a buyer because the decor was a pastiche of Bohemian and Scandinavian styles.
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A postmodern playwriting technique that fuses a variety of styles, genres, and story…
A postmodern playwriting technique that fuses a variety of styles, genres, and story lines to create a new form.
To create or compose in a mixture of styles.
- That the genetic code of the platypus proved to be as bizarrely pastiched as its anatomy enhanced the popular appeal of the report, published in the journal Nature.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for pastiche. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA