What does it mean to extend the agency of the 1960s and 1970s actions to
engage issues of gender, race, and culture today?
Rather than being passive subjects and surveyors of photography, these artists
engage issues of gender identity and politics through the medium photography.
Not exact matches
I suspected I'd get a little pushback from fellow Christians who hold a complementarian perspective on
gender, (a position that requires women to submit to male leadership in the home and church, and often appeals to «biblical womanhood» for support), but I had hoped — perhaps naively — that the book would generate a vigorous, healthy debate about things like the Greco Roman household codes found in the epistles
of Peter and Paul, about the meaning
of the Hebrew word ezer or the Greek word for deacon, about the Paul's line
of argumentation in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 11, about our hermeneutical presuppositions and how they are influenced by our own culture, and about what we really mean when we talk about «biblical womanhood» — all
issues I address quite seriously in the book, but which have yet to be
engaged by complementarian critics.
While I believe there is already great material for men out there, as I surveyed the Bible and the culture
of manhood (cross-ethnically), musical art, media, movies, magazines, the state
of the church, urban dwellings, global cities, and the political climate
of our country on
gender, I continued to find the
issue of manhood needing to be
engaged.
In other words, Granju would have us believe that that a women with decades
of scholarship in the area
of gender studies, a woman with impeccable feminist credentials, has
engaged in one
of the leading
issues in contemporary mothering and contemporary feminism for no better reason than to promote increase her income.
This year,
issues such as sustainable food (In Defense
of Food),
gender inequality in the tech industry (CODE: Debugging the Gender Gap), and homelessness (Dogtown Redemption) engaged audiences and provided hope and opportunities for positive c
gender inequality in the tech industry (CODE: Debugging the
Gender Gap), and homelessness (Dogtown Redemption) engaged audiences and provided hope and opportunities for positive c
Gender Gap), and homelessness (Dogtown Redemption)
engaged audiences and provided hope and opportunities for positive change.
Through
engaging, interactive exercises, participants will: - Create a common understanding
of diversity and inclusion - Link diversity
issues with achieving district goals - Broaden the scope
of diversity beyond race and
gender issues - Reveal and assess the impact
of subtle biases on district success - Discuss the behaviors required to create an inclusive environment where every man, woman and child feels included, valued and respected.
To be successful, it is important, however, that the public understand the
issues and become actively
engaged in creating a scenario where every student, regardless
of color, national origin, religion or
gender, is taught by a qualified teacher.
We
engage a wide audience, particularly young people, in discourse and debate on
issues surrounding the politics
of race, class and
gender.
Drawing from
gender issues, the variety
of ways in which people
engage their sexuality using technology, and in an attempt to redefine the heteronormative standard narrative often found in porn, artist Faith Holland has spent the past few months collecting and selecting cum shots that have been submitted to her by a wide range
of online users for her new project «Ookie Canvases».
Co-taught by Edith Wolfe, Assistant Director
of the Stone Center for Latin American Studies, and museum Director Monica Ramirez - Montagut, the class — which traveled to the island in March 2017 — asks how Puerto Rican socially
engaged activists and artists address problems
of gender, food access, blight, loss
of traditions, and other
issues affecting their communities.
By so doing, Tith questions the status
of the artist and its potential to
engage with
issues of community,
gender and women's identity.
These exhibitions have
engaged with Canada's cultural genocide and processes
of Truth and Reconciliation, the trauma
of war, the role
of the child within contemporary political discourse, to normative discourses
of sexuality and
gender among many other
issues.
The gift strengthens the Nasher Museum's growing collection
of contemporary art and includes work that
engages with
issues of gender relations, sexual identity and racial and cultural identity.
The artist's research - based work
engages with
issues of history, capitalism, and
gendered labor.
Through her choice
of subjects, her work was
engaged with
issues related to
gender and racial inequality, family dynamics, labor struggles, and violence.
The employment
of radically queer and
gender issues is considerable in the art practice
of Ren Hang, though the artist himself was not interested in creating neither politically or socially
engaged works.
As with many politically
engaged artists whose practices take on complex
issues of ethnicity, social justice, and
gendered cultural agency, Maiolino deconstructs oppressive hierarchies not only on an institutional scale, but in terms
of their everyday manifestations in the daily experiences
of the disenfranchised.
Each is critically
engaged with content surrounding
issues of identity — be it
gender, sexuality, culture, race, or economic class.
Those who have witnessed the effects
of climate change need no convincing, while some other people, somewhat removed from the
issue, still do, explained Mr. Bainimarama, who expressed pride in his country's efforts to
engage the youth constituency and mobilize
gender issues in the international climate process.
The
gender pay league tables that will emerge a year from now will require employers to step up their D&I initiatives and
engage with their PR team but they will not move the needle on the
issue of the
gender pay gap.
Description: Explores the role and practice
of human service professionals and how they can effectively
engage non-resident fathers by understanding
issues of power,
gender, race, and socioeconomic status
of professionals and the fathers and families they serve.