Not exact matches
This resource draws on memoirs, journalistic accounts, and interviews to shed light on contemporary
debates in Great Britain
around national
identity and integration.
The book also looks at
debates around cultural
identity today, which makes it a contemporary novel as well as an historical one.
The exhibition offers an overview of art made in the United States between 1989 and 2001 — from the fall of Communism to 9/11 — and is organized
around three principle themes: the so - called «
identity politics»
debates; the digital revolution; and globalization.
As the
debates among artists and intellectuals
around a «racially representative art» shifted to discussions about social responsibility and a «folk»
identity, artists like Aaron Douglas increasingly turned to the public arena as a means of addressing art and life in the 1930s.
Her work addresses ongoing
debates around traditional gender roles, body politics, and
identity.
Maps are part of
debates around subjects such as resources, territoriality,
identity and migration.
Born in Chicago in 1977, Johnson lives and works in New York and is an African - American artist considered central in the
debate revolving
around the issues of
identity, integration and memory.
In the first weeks of this 10th anniversary year of the September 11th attacks and the subsequent invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, with global economic and political policies fueling conflict and prompting revolt, there have been numerous programs, talks, and
debates around the city about walls: metaphorical walls created by censorship, physical walls dividing Israeli and Palestinian territories or Mexican borders, but also boundaries that some artists insist are essential to maintaining the integrity of cultural expression and
identity.
For GENERATION, Maclean has developed themes first touched on in her recent exhibition I HEART SCOTLAND (2013), which looked at popular markers of Scottish
identity and the political
debate around independence.