traditionalismtra‧di‧tion‧al‧is‧m /trəˈdɪʃənəlɪzəm/ noun [uncountable] - During the mid-sixties, Nietzsche's traditionalism seems even to have stiffened: certainly his attitude towards anything Wagnerian became explicitly antipathetic.
- Henceforth modernism would be the star of western art while traditionalism was increasingly ignored.
- I do want a soft blend of ritual traditionalism with friends and family.
- It is typically equated with the traditionalism of figures like De Bonald and Lammenais.
- M'ARS specialise in a distinctive form of traditionalism, close to surrealism.
- The social institutions of traditionalism, such as religion and ideology, can also be seen as deformed, pathological modes of communication.
- They rejected both scientism and traditionalism.
- Without this dynamic process, tradition stagnates into a fixation of habit, traditionalism, bringing about its death or rejection.
nountraditiontraditionalisttraditionalismadjectivetraditionaltraditionalistadverbtraditionally