Sentences with phrase «from surveillance cultures»

They reviewed more than 500 randomly selected isolates of MRSA from surveillance cultures to determine drug resistance.

Not exact matches

But if anything good can be said to have come from these events, it's the elevated level of awareness and (mostly) constructive dialogue about serious issues like mental health, militarism, surveillance, and rape culture.
If any of us ever had illusions that a reformist posture was sufficient, either from a theological perspective or as social policy, the intractability of governmental and economic systems, the growth of massive and seemingly uncontrollable systems of surveillance, military power, and mass culture increasingly narrow the scope of our options to those of resistance and withdrawal.
But they were being hampered from doing so because of the impact of workload and the monitoring and surveillance culture in schools which was also damaging teachers mental health.
It's entirely plausible that MGS5 was compromised by Kojima's acrimonious departure from Konami, but MGS5's ambiguity feels like a fitting conclusion for a series that raised weighty, human, questions — about surveillance society, the nature of self and digital culture — a decade ahead of time.
Making the jump from mobile to consoles is Camouflaj's exploration of surveillance culture, Republique, which is now available for the PS4.
Examining the regimes of control to which the human body is increasingly subjected — ranging from governmental and corporate surveillance to the relentless pursuit of youth — Kline addresses the erosion of boundaries between labor and leisure and the incursion of consumer culture into the most literally intimate aspects of life: blood, DNA, neurochemistry.
Representative examples from these projects are joined in this exhibition by Conrad's last sculptures and installations, which evoked and critiqued what he perceived as an emerging culture of surveillance, control, and containment.
Ranging from landscape shots to super-sized closeups, the work, presented by London gallery Carroll Fletcher, encapsulates the uncomfortable intersection of the surveillance state with selfie culture.
Similarly drawing from pervasive surveillance culture, Ry David Bradley uses online databases of constantly streaming security cameras to create surreal image portals which toy with our perception.
The gallery has put together a large - scale survey of the L.A. - based artist's video work that draws from the culture of surveillance and the internet.
The «passive - aggressive» performance both mocks and iconises the consumer gaze of teen - girldom, inspired by the culture of surveillance today's teens are growing up with, as well as everything from Hello Kitty and Apple products to Miley Cyrus tongue lashing.
From her early performances as the fictional Roberta Breitmore to her recent surveillance installations, Leeson has focused on the role that technology, media and artifice play in contemporary culture.
«Who Knows» speaks both to the context of 21st century surveillance (from the Snowden revelations to the ubiquity of CCTV cameras in urban space) as well to the cultures of gossip, scandal seeking, phone hacking and to the playful and flirtatious eye that people keep on each other through social media.
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