Sentences with phrase «cultural phenomenon called»

In case you were living under a rock in the past five years, a pop - cultural phenomenon called Fifty Shades of Grey stood to attention (eh thank you).
With the help of a young hacker, Lin connects the dots between the device that haunts his daughter, his enemy's sinister army, and a strange cultural phenomenon called «Bleeding Steel.»
Part of the web cultural phenomenon called «hacktivism» (internet activism)- petitioning is a means of getting signatures in protest of or support for an issue or cause.

Not exact matches

Nonetheless, fourthly, the Consultation recognised a phenomenon called «the historical divergence» of God's Word, whereby the Word of God of one community is enshrined by the cultural modes of a particular community.
Probably the most important cultural phenomenon in contemporary Jewry is the rise of what some have called the «ba'al teshuvah movement.»
In an article for Slate about the US Democratic primaries, Michelle Goldberg wrote in late 2015 about a cultural phenomenon of so - called «Bernie Bros» — male supporters of US presidential candidate Bernie Sanders who «seem to believe that their class politics exempt them from taking sexism seriously».
The launch of a Grand Theft Auto game has become a cultural phenomenon, surpassing even that of games like Call of Duty.
The series which has become the most played in Call of Duty history, as well as a cultural phenomenon around the globe, returns October 12th with the release of Call of Duty: Black Ops 4, a gritty, grounded, all - out combat experience.
The series which has become the most played in Call of Duty history as well as a cultural phenomenon around the globe returns October 12th with the release of Call...
Some critics call this artistic - cultural phenomenon, «copyright censorship.»
(The Yale Project on Climate Change Communication has done a lot of work revealing how powerfully such cultural and ideological predispositions shape views of the phenomenon too loosely called «global warming.»)
As I stressed, what social scientists call «cultural cognition» is only one factor shaping perceptions of phenomena revealed by science.
It seems that the great CAGW delusion, early 21st century «modern end of the world cult», cultural phenomenon or whatever else history will call it, has not quite yet had its bubble pierced.
This book shines a fascinating light on this process by revealing how climate change has been transformed from a physical phenomenon, measurable and observable by scientists, into a social, cultural and political one... This book is so important because Mike Hulme can not be dismissed as a skeptic yet he is calling for a radical change in the way we discuss climate change.
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