The other half is directed
at global capitalism's destructive attitudes toward creation.
Not exact matches
To me, this is just another example of
Capitalism at Global Size is not really capitalism at all but some Enterprise by
Capitalism at Global Size is not really
capitalism at all but some Enterprise by
capitalism at all but some Enterprise by Rulebook.
Whilst the preceding text highlights the sovereignty deficit resulting from globalisation, the contribution from the ATTAC, looks
at new financial forms of
global capitalism.
He contends, first, that liberation theology should free its social analysis from a preoccupation with
global «dependent
capitalism» and move toward more specific analyses of land reform and of other pressing needs which would help popular Christian movements be «more politically effective
at a national level.»
Despite the fact that everyone,
at some level, knows this, the point needs to be argued because we are all also partly brainwashed by a theory that suggests that
global capitalism strongly supports the overall well being of humanity.
But setting aside the distortions and inaccuracies in their characterization of my position, I do believe they are correct in judging that very fundamental matters are
at stake, and that the perspective I embody and represent is now the greatest threat to their celebration of
global corporate
capitalism.
And in fact, we can learn a lesson from its defeat in terms of the strength of
capitalism as a
global system, which used all political and military means
at its disposal to bring about the downfall of socialism.
At the same time, he has misgivings about the effects of
global capitalism and believes in integration, tolerance, and inclusiveness.
Its essential strength is in its attempt to understand the social murder
at Grenfell Tower in terms of the devastation being wrought by
global capitalism.
As capital moves freely, investing in production or in fictitious forms of
capitalism, and as speculators, financier capitalists, stock and bond traders, investment bankers, hedge fund mangers, and others help to unleash the forces of capital accumulation globally, and as neo-liberalism with its aggressive pro-market state policies allows this finance capital to restructure itself, to diversify its forms, to expand its accumulation opportunities through the growth of retail, financial and service industries, and enhance its
global reach, then it is safe to assume that our ecosystems have been harnessed exploitatively in a system of capitalist commodity production such that we can not talk about
capitalism at all without talking about
capitalism as a world ecology.
At 18th Street's main gallery, Dizon will weave video that she has shot together with archival footage, text from philosophical, political, and literary sources, and sounds composed from field recordings, scores, and voice, into an intricate work that invites viewers to reflect upon diasporic subjectivity, postcolonial history, and the effects of
global capitalism in the Philippines.
At the 2017 Whitney Biennial, the group Occupy Museums, a collective that exposes how
global capitalism co-opts culture for its own commercial ends, mounted an installation that examines the debts accrued by artists in the pursuit of their work.
The connection between raw material and its consumption by the immaterial systems of
global capitalism is the main theme running through Metal, a group show of five artists
at Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, which forms part of the AV Festival, a biennial programme of art, film and music in the northeast of England, now in its sixth iteration.
At 18th Street's main gallery, Dizon will weave the video that she has shot together with archival footage, text from philosophical, political, and literary sources, and sounds composed from field recordings, scores, and voice, into an intricate work that invites viewers to reflect upon diasporic subjectivity, postcolonial history, and the effects of
global capitalism in the Philippines.
For a show
at the South London Gallery in 2009, Superflex mused on
global capitalism and climate change by showing a film of a replica McDonald's burger bar being slowly flooded, as in a disaster movie.
Producing work over a period of extreme political tension, social anxiety and rising
global capitalism, Kienholz created a body of work that, in the words of Guy Brett, reviewing his 1971 exhibition
at London's ICA, were «a protest against a dehumanized, fear - ridden society».
The L.A. - based artist and cultural critic has transformed the gallery space
at the museum into an arcade that picks apart
global capitalism.
Syjuco's installations frequently invite viewers to be active participants, from crocheting counterfeit designer handbags to purchasing items
at an alternative gift shop within a museum, in order to investigate
global consumerism,
capitalism and its effects on artists.
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS and SCREENINGS The Concordia Biennial: The Art of Teaching, Concordia Gallery, Concordia University, St. Paul, MN, 2016 It's so hard to live without you, Helsingborgs Dagblads Photo Salon, Landskrona Photo Festival, Landskrona, Sweden, 2016 The Golden Hour, See 18 Film Screening Room, MSP International Airport, Minneapolis, MN 2016 - 17 North of the 45th Parallel, DeVos Museum, Marquette, MI, 2016 Experimental Cinema: Pixels, Minneapolis International Film Festival, St. Anthony Main Theater, Minneapolis, MN, 2016 Society of Scottish Artists Annual Exhibition, RSA Gallery, National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh, 2015 This From There, Circa Gallery, Minneapolis, MN, 2015 Photography Since the Millennium, Louisville Photo Biennial, Carnegie Center for Art and History, New Albany, IN, 2015 SPE Combined Caucus Juried Exhibition, Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, LA, 2015 SPE Combined Caucus Juried Exhibition, UCF Fine Arts Gallery, Orlando, FL, 2015 Perspectives, MN State Arts Board, St. Paul, MN, 2014 Faux / Real, Non-Fiction Gallery, Savannah, GA, 2014 Finders and Keepers, Duchesne Academy (participating Fotofest space), Houston, TX, 2014 Acquisitions and Debuts of the Hillstrom Museum of Art, St. Peter, MN, 2013 Art in the Age of Globalization: Outsourced, Minneapolis Institute of Art, MN, 2012 - 2013 What Can not Be Cured Must Be Endured, Paul Robeson Gallery, Newark, NJ, 2012 Terraforming: Contemporary discourse in landscape photography, King Street Gallery, Silver Spring, MD, 2012 Then + Now, Hillstrom Museum, St. Peter, MN, 2012 Intersections, Minneapolis College of Art and Design Gallery, Minneapolis, MN, 2012 EA$ T / WE $ T: A
Global Look
at Capitalism, New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art, New Harmony, IN, 2011 Faculty Exhibition, Schaeffer Gallery, Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, MN, 2010 2008 McKnight Fellows Exhibition, Franklin Artworks, Minneapolis, MN, 2010 Re-Generate, Re-Image, Re-Focus: New Directions in Photography, Priscilla Payne Gallery, Bethlehem, PA, 2009 Yummy, Nexus Foundation, Philadelphia, PA, 2007 Visual Noise, UMC Art Gallery, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, 2007 Imagining Namibia, The Art Center of St. Peter, St. Peter, MN, 2006 Soul Searching, Cyrus M. Running Gallery, Concordia College, Moorhead, MN, 2006 WCA International Video Shorts Festival, Boston, MA, 2006 Cuba Libre, The Art Center of St. Peter, St. Peter, MN, 2004 Faculty Exhibition, Carver Center for Arts and Technology, Baltimore, MD, 2003 SPE Regional Conference Exhibition, Manchester Craftsman's Guild, Pittsburgh, PA, 2002 True Confessions, Charles Theater, Baltimore, MD, 2000 On Sight, The School of Visual Arts, New York, NY, 2000 The Photographic Persona, Belknap Gallery, Univ. of Louisville, Louisville, KY, 1999 The Y2K Solution, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, 1999 AugenMusik (installation / performance), Peabody Conservatory, Baltimore, MD, 1999 Emerging Artists, Maryland Federation of Artists, Annapolis, MD, 1999 LaGrange National, LaGrange College, LaGrange, GA, 1998 Choice, Tate Gallery, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 1998 Three Rivers Arts Festival, Wood Street Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA, 1997 She Defies Gravity, Ekhartsberga Gallery, McKees Rocks, PA, 1996 Exposures, Garfield Artworks, Pittsburgh, PA, 1996 Three Rivers Arts Festival, Wood Street Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA, 1995 Arts on Tour, Vine Street Gallery, Sharon, PA, 1994 Manchester Craftsman's Guild Staff Exhibition, Pittsburgh, PA, 1994
Farmers, unions, social organizations, indigenous peoples, women and youth (
at the national, regional and
global level) have come together to demand climate justice and fight against the consumerist and extractivist model that, along with the
capitalism and neoliberalism systems of the modern world, is harming Mother Earth.
Bill McKibben, 350.org founder Naomi Klein, activist and author of the book This Changes Everything:
Capitalism vs. The Climate 99 posse, Italian hip hop / reggae band Caparezza Florent Compain, President of Les Amis de la Terre France Mark Fodor, Director, CEE Bankwatch Network Johan Frijns, Director, BankTrack Elena Gerebizza, Re: Common Sebastien Godinot, Economist, WWF European Policy Office Rafael Gonzalez, Dakota / Puerto Rican Water Protector James Hansen, Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences
at Columbia University Wenonah Hauter, Executive Director, Food & Water Watch Rachel Heaton, Mazaska Talks co-founder and Muckleshoot Tribal member / Duwamish descendant Danielle Hirsch, Director, Both ENDS Ziva Kavka Gobbo, Chairperson, Focus Association for Sustainable Development Jeremy Leggett, Founder and Chair, SolarAid; Founder and Director, Solarcentury Simon Lewis, Professor of
Global Change Science, UCL Lo Stato Sociale Erri De Luca, Italian novelist, translator and poet Olivier de Marcellus, Coordinator, Climat Justice Sociale
So true... Fear of
global warming has been great for academia and the Left from the beginning because it, «makes industry and
capitalism look bad while affording endless visuals of animals and third - world humans suffering
at the hands of wealthy Westerners,» as Van Dyke noticed, plus: «Best of all, being driven by junk - science that easily metamorphoses as required, it appeared to be endlessly self - sustaining.»
The controversy about
global warming resides all too perfectly
at the collision point of environmentalism and free market
capitalism.
At this rate of progress, the end of
capitalism is further away than the heat death of the universe, which will render concerns about
global warming irrelevant.
I'd have scoffed
at the communist thing a few years ago, but I no longer have any doubt that for a fair enough sized minority,
global warming is their best opportunity to do away with
capitalism.
Our policy agenda is a difficult sale to many on the Right given their conviction that
global warming is —
at best — a wildly overwrought problem and —
at worst — a fairy tale told by a corrupted scientific community for those that want to shut - down modern industrial
capitalism.
The war in Iraq, the crackdown on civil liberties
at home, and the president's strident nationalism combined to create a story line in which Big Oil, imperialism, and
global capitalism threatened apocalypse well before Gore warned of a «day of reckoning.»
More about environmental economics: Focus on Focus Earth: The Green New Deal Get Ready for a Green Jobs Explosion, New Study Says Needed: Copernican Shift Toward A
Global Eco-Economy Why We Need to Reset
Capitalism to Put the Environment
at the Center Book Review: The Green Collar Economy by Van Jones Green Jobs Can Bail Out the Environment, Rebuild Communities: Worldwatch Institute
Which brings me to the question: do you agree with what I said in my comment
at # 9, i.e. that a program of reforming
capitalism in a social democratic / socialist direction will not succeed in addressing
global warming unless it contains a substantial suite of policies specifically aimed
at addressing that problem.
One thing I would add — it ought to be obvious (and I certainly hope it is) that a process of «winding back and decelerating the present form of
capitalism», including «more social democracy, more regulation», will only be effective
at mitigating the effect of
global warming (partially or wholly), if it includes a large suite of policies specifically aimed
at addressing
global warming, that is, replacing emissions - producing activities or processes (particularly energy sources) with non emissions - producing ones.