Sentences with phrase «broader cultural sense»

Whatever logistical heartburn the timing of the Tito's Prize open call deadline and exhibition timeframe may have given Ingram, the career boost is remarkably timely in a broader cultural sense.
What about technological change in a broader cultural sense?

Not exact matches

We may observe the liberation process (in the broad sense) as the aftermath of the decolonization process mainly after the Second World War, which is still in operation, not only in the socio - political and economic fields, but also in the cultural field.
This means that context — in the broad sense of cultural, religious, social, political and economical circumstances — and text — as Scripture in its process of transmission and interpretation, that is, its Tradition — do mutually interpret each other.
One of the director's avowed intentions is to highlight how sexuality, mediated via the sex industry in the broad sense, has so rapidly displaced other forms of cultural exchange in the Ireland of the last two decades.
However, we did find that our kids needed a lot of cultural immersion in a broader sense of the term.
While not being guides in the traditional sense you can expect them to have a broad general knowledge of the countries visited on the trip, including historical, cultural, religious and social aspects.
Though fragmented and abstracted, the narratives played out between the performers in Relinquish allude to power structures within relationships in the broadest sense of the word — romantic, sexual, familial, societal and cultural.
Akunyili Crosby describes her interiors as «wormholes» which gives some sense of the broad cultural, social, and political connections she makes.
Indeed, and most remarkably, the artists featured in Beyond the Veil have opted to portray themselves on their own terms, bringing distinct senses of history onto the broader cultural debate.
Here, ideas of home, hospitality and generosity mingle with thoughts about cultural inheritance in a broader sense.
These elements involve being sensitive, alert and open to cultural diversity in its broadest sense.
[61] Rather, «it may embrace self - governance in the broader sense of decision making to maintain identity including cultural matters, languages, customary law, definition of group membership and ownership and use of land».
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