0 a place, especially a high place, that provides a good, clear view of an area: --
1 a particular personal way of thinking or set of opinions: --
The documentary contains a first-hand description of political life in Havana from the vantage point of a senior bureaucrat.
This vantage point makes his account of the period from 1957 to 1961 absorbing.
In telling a story, for example, one can easily assume the spatial and temporal vantage point of a character.
One can measure, for example, the region visible from a given vantage point and the distance between two locations, respectively.
Her training in material culture provides a distinctively different vantage point from which to analyze the much researched subject of veiling.
But to one conceptualization of such a vantage point, the "tableau," he continuously returned.
The international vantage point provided calls attention to existing differences in regulatory approaches that should be considered as regulations are increasingly internationalized.
Yet from the vantage point of modern social science, we know substantially more about these entities as partisan organizations than we do as patronage organizations.
However, from an outsider's vantage point with a winner-take-all perspective, it is difficult to assess who won.