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confusion worse confounded
Complete confusion, deriving from a usage by Milton in Paradise Lost (1667).

Dance Reference library
Francis Sparshott, Graham McFee, Mark Franko, Mark Franko, Erin Brannigan, and André Lepecki
Encyclopedia of Aesthetics (2 ed.)
...time to note how “it is therefore imperative to distinguish contemporary art from art of the current moment” (1992, p. 128). Similarly, and considering dance specifically, Frédéric Pouillaude states how the contemporary, in the expression “contemporary dance,” is not to be confounded with the “self-figuration of an epoch,” since it concerns “a certain mutation that has happened in the choreographic field during the past 10 years” (i.e., roughly since the mid-1990s). This “mutation” results from the fact that choreographic works over the past decade and a...
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