Sentences with phrase «sociopolitical change»

Opening in fall 2018, the 50th anniversary of 1968 and a landmark year of social unrest, this exhibition will illustrate a time of great sociopolitical change.
The mission of The New School Art Collection, in recognition of its historic commitment to art as a vehicle for sociopolitical change, is to advance the importance of art as an agent for personal and collective transformation.
Pynchon's books happen at moments of profound cultural and sociopolitical change, only half - understood by the players.
It seems to me that despite its priority for sociopolitical change, organized Protestantism shows little strength for stemming the secular tide.
But it's also a matter of timing: The show offers strange eruptions of relationship palaver, set in the midst of world - altering sociopolitical changes and the daily churn of building a TV newshour around them.
Interestingly, the most recent 3500 years of prehistory was a time of Native American population growth and sociopolitical changes, perhaps increased human - induced fire, as well as a period of climatic instability [41,42], both of which could have affected contemporary levels of mtDNA diversity.
The answer is probably not to be found in exhibitions like All the World's Futures, this year's Venice Biennale, curated by Okwui Enwezor, whose overarching theme related to «the confluence of sociopolitical changes and radical historical ruptures.»

Not exact matches

Changing the conversation, Ladson - Billings moves attention away from achievement gaps to what she calls the education debt that includes historical, sociopolitical, moral, and economic debt owed to the marginalized in our nation.
Some of the changes from one year to the next can be attributed to fuel prices, sociopolitical shifts like Brexit, and recent elections.
Whether it's the fault of our (faulty) sociopolitical system, or we've simply come to the next chapter in the constant cycle of creative «youth in revolt» — times are changing.
B. R. A. C. E., MASS MoCA is Part II of Bifurcated Radical Anarchist Cultural Enterprise, or B. R. A. C. E. a social project intended to change the unjust sociopolitical climate of the United States.
It will look at how we engage with our current sociopolitical climate and will explore / debate the tools and strategies needed to «radically challenge and provoke change
Citing the decade's significance as a period in which dramatic changes in the nature of art practice went hand in hand with sociopolitical upheavals worldwide, the 17 - member, crossdepartmental curatorial team — led by Temkin and Martino Stierli, chief curator of architecture and design — describe the installation as «organized through the lens of the 1960s.»
Artistic change paralleled sociopolitical upheaval around the globe, and these seismic shifts reach to the present moment.
Walking a tight rope between personal aesthetics and the repressive sociopolitical conditions of their countries, seven artists and a collaborative group — from Indonesia, Vietnam and Myanmar, respectively — demonstrated their roles as radical emissaries of change.
In other words, the study does a simple physical analysis of the trade off between conventional mitigation and negative emissions technologies in a 2C world and makes no assumptions about changing economic, technological and sociopolitical contexts, the authors note.
Third, sociopolitical pressures (e.g., fossil - fuel divestment campaigns, environmental advocacy, grass - roots protests and changing public opinion) could create an environment in which carbon - intensive businesses could lose their «license to operate,» thereby stranding assets.
To close the well - being gap, we think that sociopolitical action and policy reform aimed at changing the odds, that is by equalising opportunities for families of children with ID to sustain a meaningful daily routine, are as vital, if not more so, than interventions designed to help these families beat the odds.
What's required is intervention at a higher level: sociopolitical action and policy reform to change the odds for families of children with ID.
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