You can do fantastic sermons in it about creation, mystery, otherness, grandeur.
From the guardian.co.uk
It's an acceptance of stereotypes, of otherness, of fear, of racial hierarchies.
From the ideas.time.com
The otherness of Japan, real and imagined, parallels the distance of adolescence.
From the economist.com
Cancer has a way of issuing patients a sudden ticket to the world of otherness.
From the well.blogs.nytimes.com
It is an alluring parable about how otherness at once kindles and defeats desire.
From the guardian.co.uk
In the Bard, entrails are a locus of subjectivity and otherness, belief and doubt.
From the markvernon.com
It doesn't draw in otherness which would involve an interaction with the consumer.
From the guardian.co.uk
As it is in his current Broadway hit M. Butterfly, Hwang's theme is otherness.
From the time.com
The tarry tide of Tate and Lyle is a perfect symbol of otherness and neglect.
From the telegraph.co.uk
More examples
The quality of being not alike; being distinct or different from that otherwise experienced or known
Otherness (1994) is an anthology of science fiction short stories by David Brin. Interspersed in the book are notes on some stories and other short articles by Brin.
Otherness is a 1995 EP by the Scottish band Cocteau Twins. It was released along with Twinlights as a teaser for the full length album Milk and Kisses. While it was a companion piece to Twinlights, it was very different in style. ...
A term for the way people tend to view others (people or nature) that are dissimilar and separated. In some cases the term is used in a general and neutral way to signify that which is fundamental different. In other cases it implies a complex system of devaluation. ...