Sentences with word «conflation»

His work debates the idea of conflation between object and subject with deft investigations of race, gender, sexuality, class, and performance.
While personalized learning is gaining traction nationwide, there is still much confusing terminology surrounding it, as well as conflation with blending learning and other terms.
Li's landscapes are fundamentally abstract, yet their linguistic evocations seem like conflations of written text and figurative image, despite being neither.
With an encompassing hostility directed at all levels of art market participation — from collectors and dealers to curators and the artists themselves — these pieces dismantle the oxymoronic myth of consumer choice, and the false conflation of economic patronage with personal identity.
I think there is a lot of confusion and conflation here between organic farming, organic labeled food, non-GMO food., and vine - ripened food.
Without espousing the Arnoldian conflation of the religious and the aesthetic, we might nonetheless appreciate the intuition prompting it, namely that, there are important connections between religion and art: both are oriented toward meaning, and both deal in universal human values - both are fundamental to being human.
They provide chapters on most of the major books of both testaments, though not without some interesting conflations: while Leviticus and Numbers each get chapters of their own, Jeremiah and Ezekiel, as well as the 12 prophets, have to settle for chapters together, as do the Pauline epistles.
In the period since the introduction of the free schools policy there have been substantial challenges for education — not least the political conflation of education and the battle against extremist teaching.
In a funny conflation of Mister Rogers» Neighborhood and Hans Namuth, we see a bulky de Kooning out at East Hampton with his slippers and overalls, pre-Alzheimer paintings stacked around him.
He achieved this through a unique conflation of performance, film and sculpture, and his characteristic use of unconventional materials such as thermoplastics and petroleum jelly.
Zittel, represented by Andrea Rosen in NYC, is known for her Bauhausian conflation of art and... read more... «RESIDENCY: Andrea Zittel's Wagon Station Encampment»
Ilana Halperin melds immediate physical and personal actions with geologic contexts; she offers poetic conflations of differing fields of interest.
Moreover, there is a curious conflation of developments in this country and developments in Israel.
-LSB-...] These examples reflect the commonly accepted conflation of state and people that produces the familiar term «nation - state,» which, again, reflects the principle of national self - determination.
I realize in this high low conflation we see all these kinds of things in our world, and they all are meaningful to us.
artists have invited regional artists as their guests to exhibit work in this delightful visual conflation.
Trump's pugnacious language may seem to jar with ordinary Christian rhetoric, but it's actually very much in keeping with the imagery of «muscular Christianity,» the quintessentially Anglo - American conflation of machismo and religiosity that has defined American evangelicalism since the country's foundation.
Such conjecture is not impossible, but it is only conjecture, even though it has encouraged the church's historic conflation of this woman and Mary Magdalene, who is mentioned at the end of this Gospel reading («from whom seven demons had gone out»).
In her 1992 book The God of Thinness, Mary Louise Bringle similarly denounced the Christian diet industry for «feeding off the facile conflation of fat and sin (and forgetting that the traditional teachings of the church condemn consumptive behaviors but say nothing about cosmetic matters of body shape and size).»
If he goes on to speak of «a saint riding in an airplane», he should realize that saint and airplane are two very different images for many of his hearers and they will relinquish one or both rather than admit his radical conflation of the two.
What gives the Christian gospel its distinctive identity is precisely its irreducible conflation of truth - claiming myth and history.
It built upon works by American social gospelers Washington Gladden, Josiah Strong, Richard Ely, Shailer Mathews and Francis G. Peabody, but nothing like Rauschenbusch's stunning conflation of historical, theological and political arguments had been seen previously.
Sanders linking Trump's strong words to defending the flag and the anthem was at best an inappropriate conflation and, at worst, a deliberate deflection showing Sanders» complicity in his statements.
Setting aside the inaccurate conflation of revenues and expenses, it hinges upon a dangerous worldview — that private property belongs to the government, such that «not taking» is the equivalent of «giving.»
His equivalence — critics would argue conflation — of «agents of al - Qaeda and Iran» with the «same menace» in parts of Pakistan, Palestine, the broader Middle East, Somalia, and the Far East to «our own streets, on our airways, in the meeting places of our own nations» creates a spectre of Islamist extremism that, as Blair believes, is the 21st - century parallel to the communist threat of the 20th century.
Right now there is a serious conflation in politics and the media between violence and violence against property.
«Anderson's strategy for capturing Pynchon is to roll him up and smoke him, until the smoke passes on to you and some confusion and conflation set it, until it's all just Paul Thomas Pynchon.
In the latest excerpt from his book on Terence Davies, Michael Koresky contextualizes and defends the director's controversial conflation of shame and sexuality.
But put a gun in the hands of Woody Harrelson and some glorious gab in the mouth of Christopher Walken - the most deadpan of deadpanning thespians - and it's impossible not to make something of this profanity - flying conflation.
It's as meticulous as you'd expect, and in its endless conflations of technocrat idealism and hippie ethics, probably as close as Cameron will ever get to a Declaration of Principles.
A conscious conflation is made; the character is inextricable from the performer.

Phrases with «conflation»

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