This ebullient crime caper is the author's bemused look at the commodification of history. |
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A materialist understanding is, instead, an essential step in liberating culture from the stranglehold of commodification. |
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But their ascent to this status depended largely on the processes of industrialisation, urbanisation and commodification. |
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They are also protesting the commodification of public goods and services, like water, electricity and garbage collection. |
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But for heaven's sake, let's not intellectualise an endeavour that reeks of commerce and commodification. |
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It's an action adventure that has at its heart the commodification of human beings through cloning. |
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It was a century of unparalleled global expansion of cities, with an attendant acceleration of the process of commodification. |
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For a change, this is a breakaway from the celluloid kitsch that prospers on the objectification and commodification of women in cinema. |
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Generally, cooptation and commodification have been omnipresent concomitants of efforts to reach wider audiences through major labels. |
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The inability of the art establishment to re-invent itself is inextricably tied to the commodification of art. |
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For right-wing politicians, this commodification is associated with an invasive, alien, foreign culture. |
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The tendency to define and standardize product quality lay at the heart of the commodification process. |
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The commodification of leisure in particular is central to the second chapter. |
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A materialist understanding is an essential step in liberating culture from the stranglehold of commodification. |
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Binding us all into a system that is read by computers the world over, the barcode speaks of a commodification of more than goods. |
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She is incapable of personal growth because she refuses to face her own commodification and its internalization. |
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In the hands of a garden-variety appropriationist, the hats would represent a satiric comment on the commodification of individualism. |
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The trouble with commodification is that there are just some things you can't and shouldn't put a price on. |
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The inability of the art establishment to reinvent itself is inextricably tied to the commodification of art. |
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Parody or bricolage count among the most visible strategies of resistance, to subvert the commodification of values and persons by the media. |
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The commodification of life, while outwardly pretty, has no soul. |
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I argue that one of the most pressing human rights issues for the new century is the continued devalorized commodification of Mexican-origin populations. |
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True, Smith and Saltz are commenting on an especially egregious instance of commodification. |
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The problem is, even child labor officials aren't quite up to speed on what it means to protect kids from commodification. |
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But the important difference between then and now is that this process is institutionalised, through a commodification that is fully a part of market forces. |
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I think what wasn't there and what has changed is the fetishisation and commodification of being mum and dad. |
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His paintings and sculptures experiment with notions of commodification and the readymade, but are a critique of contemporary culture. |
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Experts on each of the topics covered add their voices to the rising chorus of resistance to commodification, deregulation and global corporatization. |
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Therapeutic cloning for research purposes represents the commodification and the objectification of human life. |
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But the commodification of news on the internet has meant that this is something few newspapers have. |
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In effect, the commodification of water leads to the enclosure of the water commons. |
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It is the women who walk long miles for water who are leading the movement against the privatisation and commodification of water. |
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The commodification of electricity and its trading is the result of the global trend of increasing control of speculative capital and trade. |
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We are seeing the privatization of public goods, such as water, and the commodification of public services, such as health and education. |
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The bill states that there is a concern that the bill will lead to commodification. |
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And neither movement believes that the commodification of social needs and privatization of health care are inevitable or desirable. |
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Should there be an international trade ruling in favour of the commodification of water, such legislation would become illegal. |
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Advances in technology have brought the commodification of information resources to a previously unparalleled and unimagined scale. |
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Starting especially in the 1940s observers of Los Angeles began viewing this self-conscious culture of the hard sell in terms of commodification and depersonalization. |
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There is not enough research or literature to fully examine the issue of commodification of ceremony. |
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But the real issues at hand are oversharing and commodification. |
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Starting with water, we must oppose this commodification of the planet. |
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Indeed, whether experience, good practice even, are forms of knowledge that lend themselves to salesmanship is one of the more acute issues that commodification poses for higher education. |
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ApplicationĀ There is an ongoing international debate regarding misappropriation, commodification, and unfair or harmful commercial exploitation of Indigenous knowledge. |
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Diversity is imperiled when a ubiquitous world media only reflects different colors of one dominant culture characterized by unadulterated commodification. |
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The core of the tourism industry is the commodification of escapism, the commercial answer to the longing of mankind for another reality beyond the dull and gray of the everyday experience. |
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The bill is the personification of the commodification of the human being. |
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Students learn to link empirical research of the media to theoretical questions of ownership, control, diversity, commodification and spatialization. |
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Already a kind of Derridean supplement, one simultaneously beholds the commodification of artworks and the artification of commodities. |
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There's an act of commodification that goes with being a public figure. |
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Or an unacceptable commodification of the blessing of a child? In this section Anglo-Saxon attitudes Playing God Scarcely a cloth cap in sight Who regulates the regulators? |
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We appreciate the addition of a strong prohibition against the commodification of the reproductive capacities of men and women and the exploitation of children, women and men for commercial ends. |
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At the local scale, for instance, the economic valorisation of an endangered species may become a factor of social inequality when collective goods become privately and competitively appropriated because of commodification. |
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In an age of economic globalization and commodification of knowledge, the ethics and values of justice, equity, participation and sustainability are imperative. |
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Subcultures tend to go through continual cycles of commodification and resistance to that commodification. |
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This started literally as the replacement of concept for a made object, one of the intentions of which was to refute the commodification of art. |
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So what happened to art and how did its commodification become so blatant? |
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The commodification of art became the subject of art itself. |
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The initiative is aimed at shedding light on the widespread commodification of women in the advertising world. |
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A lawmaker has moved to criminalize the commodification of human organs, tissues and parts, which he branded as direct affront to human dignity. |
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To achieve these objectives, this paper is conceptualized in two broad analytical frameworks-cultural commodification and fashionalism. |
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A Marxist reading of Welch's reference suggests, however, that Stewart's commodification is imparting meaning to her product and to Welch's work. |
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The state wants land to be titled to facilitate its commodification while the mass of the peasantry stands to lose from this very commodification. |
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The commodification of information is taking place through intellectual property law, contract law, as well as broadcasting and telecommunications law. |
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Commodification plays a crucial role in the creation of a self-referential subjectivity in the 17th century. |
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Commodification also has brought with it a system of reimbursement based on diagnostic coding according to stringent guidelines. |
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