Not exact matches
«
Emergence of participatory media may change the power media have to frame
social movements, as
social movement actors can forcefully offer their framing, diffuse their preferred framing to large audiences in ways that would have been simply impossible or prohibitively costly before
social media, challenge journalists directly, or create a strong enough attention around their own framing that it becomes harder to ignore.»
It is precisely the
emergence of gay liberation as a
social movement determined to restructure society's laws and mores that has made homosexuality a subject
of such intense controversy in our time.
With the
emergence of new concern in our own century for the people caught in problems
of urbanization, racial discrimination, industrialization, and the like, the churches moved first — through the so - called
social gospel
movement — to correct the previous emphasis on soul - saving as dealing only with individual persons.
The terminology
of homosexuality has been a contentious issue since the
emergence of LGBT
social movements in the mid-19th century.
This course covers the
emergence of Human Rights Education as a global
movement to address persistent
social and educational inequalities.
This report examines the
emergence of an organized abolitionist
movement in Britain by 1787 and assesses how important this
social movement was in achieving the passage
of abolitionist legislation in 1807.
To contextualize our work, we will examine the
emergence of Realism in the nineteenth century; survey different realist
movements from art history, including naturalism and
social realism; and analyze how, over time, painters have adopted realist conventions to their own ends.
Perhaps it has something to do with the peculiar mixture
of post-68 entropy and diasporic unravelling
of mass political and
social movements and the concomitant
emergence of more radically elusive and secretive strains
of resistance, unable or unwilling to be reduced to a defining form or identity.
From Bourgeois's formative struggle with the «father figures»
of surrealism, including Andre Breton and Marcel Duchamp, to her galvanizing role in the feminist art
movement of the 1970s, to her subsequent
emergence as a leading voice in postmodernism, this book explores the artist's responses to war, dislocation, and motherhood, to the predicament
of the «woman artist» and the politics
of sexual and
social liberation, as a dialogue with psychoanalysis.
Kurant probes the «unknown unknowns»
of knowledge and the speculations and exploits
of capitalism by integrating elements
of science and philosophy, and analyzing certain phenomena — collective intelligence,
emergence, virtual capital, immaterial and digital labor, evolution
of memes, civilizations and
social movements, artificial societies, energy circuits and the editing process — as political acts.
We are hearing more these days about the
emergence of a
social emotional learning (SEL)
movement across the country and -LSB-...]