Sentences with phrase «of sub cultures»

There is a key sentence in Pope Benedict's lecture: «A reason which is deaf to the divine and which relegates religion to the realm of sub cultures is incapable of entering into the dialogue of cultures today.»»

Not exact matches

Carol — I agree with what you have written about successful social adaption to either mainstream secular culture or the ecclesiastical sub culture is not a measure of psychological health where such cultures are not healthy in and of themselves.
In his illuminating new book Drugs Unlimited Mike Power sets out how market forces and the internet have combined to bypass laws and move way ahead of governments to build a hugely sophisticated, agile, international sub culture and marketplace.
Some of that learning loss comes from disruption to the classroom: subs don't know the kids, the classroom routine, the school culture.
This clever design is particularly essential as Sarah Bax notes that a new build potentially cause problems with integration of students as buildings can create sub cultures and separate staff and students within the institution, creating a lack of identity for both students and staff.
PAAVEMGMT 1.0 SmartSchools ® has taken a very unique approach to plant two trees with one seed... (redeveloped, rehabbed or rehabilitated of abandoned properties or eyesores) in any neighborhood - which can be utilized as «Hybrid Homes» or a «SmartSchools» concepts - in remedying a «Sub / culture in Crisis,» especially among young boys and young men of color.
Santa Barbara's Funk Zone has developed into a sub culture of artisian shops, hip eateries, wine tasting rooms, and award winning microbreweries.
A viral flourishing sub culture form of art originally a tool to mark territorial boundaries of urban youth.
His paintings reflect some of the problems and pleasures of being alive right now, in times fraught with corrosive bigotry and inequality; flooded with images, goods and sounds; and enriched by the incessant, even ecstatic interplay of cultures — whether high, low or sub — around the globe,» the critic writes of Wiley's new Brooklyn Museum survey.
Alongside this is a personal and insightful introduction by Fryer's long - term advisor Duncan Ward, and an essay by Amanda Harlech, both of which underline that Fryer's art works on multiple levels, and that it is conscious of its uniqueness and validity: «These works arrive at a time when little art has the tonic to shock and popular culture has seen to the dismantling of the avant - garde and the experimental in all it's sub sects... Paul Fryer senses the storm, and unfurls a kite so that we can connect with it.»
A grubby charm seeps through much of the artist's work as he exhumes links between disparate fragments of internet memes, childhood obsessions and critical theory, which clash to form an aggregate of references from high, low, sub and popular cultures.
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