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121 Sentences With "rootedness"

How to use rootedness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "rootedness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "rootedness". Mastering all the usages of "rootedness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And yet there is something universal about rootedness as well.
Dreher loved his father and sister for their rootedness and their vibrancy.
Rootedness is the most flexible metaphor for talking about the contextualized human being.
Each group hopes to preserve or recuperate a sense of rootedness in something.
"I liked Mark's urban fanciness together with his country rootedness," Dr. Boone said.
Mr. Levitas showed that we don't need to choose between rootedness and openness.
He likes old-fashioned concepts: integrity, self-control, character, dignity, loyalty, rootedness, obligation, tradition.
We are built to seek out social connection and identity, a sense of rootedness.
At a time of vaunted global culture, it suggests the creative potential of rootedness.
That's not the only take on rootedness in recent years that's, well, untethered from reality.
Claire was restlessness to my stillness, late to my early, free-floating to my rootedness.
In other words, a lot of the rootedness of a particular region is sort of undermined.
This is a kind of rootedness: The last ties extending across the Atlantic have been cut.
I don't like this rootedness about myself, but sometimes I guess I do like it, too.
Rootedness is the new normalThe currently low levels of geographic mobility are likely to be permanent.
This rising rootedness and attachment to the status quo show up in public opinion data as well.
How many things that trouble or anger you relate in some way, if only peripherally, to this rootedness?
Rootedness has many positive outcomes, such as greater attachment to place and more meaningful social and community connections.
And it does, with the ideas of rootedness, containment, hiding, conveyance, incursion, infringement, future promise, and deferred efflorescence.
So borders will be strengthened, foreign workers kept out, patriotism respected, order and discipline imposed, belonging and rootedness enshrined.
When Clinton talks about her family and her childhood, she describes a sense of deep rootedness in mainstream America.
As historian Gil Troy noted, proof of such political staying power, "an agility and a rootedness," only emerges with time.
Not coincidentally, each of these has been answered in its own way with an appeal to rootedness or, rather, re-enrootment.
But in fact, a shift toward increasing rootedness is a worrying break with the historic American norm of dynamism and mobility.
But for certain readers, this work may be an impactful journey of intentionality, burbling with glorious moments of rootedness and sharing.
"There's this deep resentment among Israelis about the war against our history and our rootedness in this city," Mr. Halevi said.
France may just have the balance between rootedness and globalized modernity right — and that's what the whole world is fighting about.
His double-rootedness in demotic culture and in patrician sophistication brackets a social zone that he leaves void, anticipating polarized responses.
The chart, used to measure visual acuteness, is instead employed as a means to highlight our stubborn rootedness in particular notions of identity.
If they lack the social rootedness and legitimacy to command positive popular loyalties, then polarized parties deepen rather than alleviate problems of democratic legitimacy.
The fact that our current moment, with its proliferation of technological networks, is more rhizomatic, doesn't mean that rootedness no longer appeals to people.
A desire for roots and rootedness may be acquiring a new importance in the new global tangle, where certainties are hard to come by.
The impacts of a more rooted societyI believe that the migration decline and associated increase in rootedness will have dramatic effects on American society.
In fact, globalism seems to challenge the very possibility of rootedness, at least the kind that once relied on nation-states for its symbolic power.
"What You Did Not Tell" is, in the end, a profound testament to the saving grace of a sense of rootedness in place and home.
The base hears blood-and-soil rootedness: "the bonds of culture, faith and tradition that make us who we are," as he intoned in Poland.
It's perhaps a symbol of her rootedness with working-class people and their pragmatism, combined with a compassion for whatever she does, whomever she talks to.
Hall was not at liberty to name the start-up, but he said that rootedness and feeling of financial security has a positive spillover effect for companies.
There is no one quite like her, no one to whom she could be compared, such is her rootedness in her own hugely eccentric and wilful Moore-ishness.
Reviewers often praised his work for its vibrant immediacy, political urgency and deep rootedness in both black oral tradition and historical documents, including the narratives of former slaves.
The question animating his small but wide-ranging book "The Future of Capitalism" is whether the sense of rootedness that so defined the Britain of his youth can be restored.
But these days Tokarczuk's binarism sounds too close to easy campus wisdom, to postmodern piety, even to neoliberal commerce: leaving is good, staying is bad; deracination is expansive, rootedness is dangerous.
There's a powerful sense of rootedness, a love of the landscape and the laid-back lifestyle, a selective affinity for the culture, and an Alamo-like pride in battling unwinnable odds.
Even in the individual portraits, their pictures map relationships and reveal a rootedness — a pride in human company and immediate spaces that seem like ways of life from a long-lost era.
She's a guest of the government, whose interests extend no further than the project of "excavating, proving and entrenching Chinese rootedness in Africa," according to the narrator, who is omniscient but unknowable.
Although we should avoid stigmatizing Muslims in general or alienating them to the point that they are more likely to radicalize, we would be wrong not to recognize ISIS's rootedness in Islamic texts.
And the charged relationship between the women is full of muffled desire: There is "something groping, and hopeless," Larsen writes, in Clare's longing for Irene's company, for her blackness and rootedness in the community.
On the flip side, rootedness can also have other types of payoffs, including stronger communities and support, help with a babysitting emergency, a shared beer after work or a loan when a job is lost.
Matsue, who is ethnically Korean, films the neighborhood in which he was raised and follows the pregnancy of his German wife, considering issues around belonging and rootedness that come from being a child of immigrants.
Life under DACA is "one day at a time," multiple recipients say; the confidence and rootedness that many immigrants with DACA felt after the program had been in place for years appears to have evaporated.
More recently, the state government in Munich created a ministry for "heimat" — a term that stands for homeland, belonging and geographic rootedness — celebrating local folklore and shifting jobs and investment from urban centers to rural areas.
Her focus was on modern loneliness, the isolated individual who loses a kind of rootedness in the world and therefore is prime material for the takeover of ideology, for the total narrative that gives life direction and meaning.
These artists of America's most exciting scene are as implicated in the global economy as the rest of us, and finding their way through an art system where the old certainties about place and rootedness no longer hold.
In the long series of masterpieces he wrote from the late 1970s until the mid-1990s, he displayed all the qualities that his critics denied him: tenderness, rootedness in the Jewishness identity, and appreciation for the sweep of democratic life in America.
"Ancestral travel is a way of connecting oneself with their progenitors and finding one's rootedness in a confusing and fast-paced world," Dallen J. Timothy, a professor at Arizona State University and editor of The Journal of Heritage Tourism, wrote in an email.
" The shrinking disease is there in the longing for rootedness, which public intellectuals like David Goodhart, my old editor at the magazine Prospect, expresses as the difference between cosmopolitan "anywheres" and "somewheres" with "rooted" identities based in "group belonging and particular places.
And denouncing anti-Semitism as a form of racism is itself a dodge, since Jews have also been persecuted on account of religion, riches, rootlessness, rootedness, and other things that strike chords on the far left while having nothing to do with race.
This is a distinctly American narrative, but the language of rootedness can be found in a remarkable range of contexts, across cultures and in all kinds of writing — including poetry, nature writing and ecocritical philosophy — to describe the human's self-extraction from the earth.
In a room so spacious it would make any New Yorker jealous, the Bushwick outpost of the Luhring Augustine Gallery is replete with glossy concrete floors and the original wood from the warehouse it once was, giving off a historical rootedness within the neighborhood.
And while that could, hypothetically, refer to anyone born on US soil, in practice it's tended to refer to people who seem "culturally" American — whether that means loyalty to the US government, rootedness in living here, or coming from (or contributing to) the proper racial stock.
The sense of their rootedness can be felt at the openings at Art in Flux: full of a mix of ethnicities, classes, and ages, in the time I have attended them never getting the whiff of de facto ethnic segregation I regularly sense at gallery openings.
She had uncommon social media savvy and cut a fantastic video while waging a campaign that did a brilliant job of both channeling long-simmering national progressive disgruntlement with the idea of Crowley's eventual accession to the speakership and emphasizing her greater rootedness in the district as currently conceived.
These disciples, instead of calling for an "Islamic holocaust," can argue that rootedness in one's homeland matters, and that immigration, miscegenation, and the homogenizing forces of neoliberal market economies collude to obliterate identities that have taken shape over hundreds of years—just as relentless development has decimated the environment.
The latter tend to live in once-homogeneous towns rather than diverse cities, valuing tradition and rootedness, while the former are footloose, prizing the novel over the long-established and constructing their identity from their individual professional or educational achievements rather than from the collective affiliations into which they were born.
The conversations at the Faith Angle Forum reminded me that in a pluralistic society, institutions like schools, companies and neighborhoods have to be structured to offer both kinds of experience: bonding experience within your own tradition to create rootedness and also bridging experience that offers journeys of curiosity across different moral ecosystems.
OFER BAVLY JERUSALEM ♦ To the Editor: Precisely because Raja Shehadeh's writings have been so important in helping to shape my understanding of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, I was especially disappointed by his dismissal of my attempt to explain my story to Palestinians, to show how my side understands its rootedness in the land we share.
The foreign influences pop out here and there (they probably account for the exotic shifting rhythms and colliding harmonies), but what binds the music and makes it more than an intellectual exercise is its rootedness in jazz idioms — and Mr. Coleman's tone on alto sax, reminiscent of Parker's piercing sweetness but swept across a broader canvas than anyone in the bebop era, even its master, could have imagined.
But I think that there is a very strong case to be made that even doing a really good job in those areas doesn't get at and can't get at the history and the experience of especially black communities and how they're policed — the understanding, narratives, views of the police, very serious lack of confidence in the police, and the rootedness of that trauma, alienation, and distrust, [based on] real historical and recent events.
Bangalore: Asian Trading Corporation, 2010. # Tradition and Innovation: Philosophy of Rootedness and Openness. Ed. Saju Chacklackal. Bangalore: Asian Trading Corporation, 2011.
He elucidated socio-biological evolution. He expands the idea of the Pakistani philosopher Sir Muhammad Iqbal that every living organism on Earth is tightly attached to it and it needs an anti-gravitational force to get rid of Earth-rootedness. He calls this freedom from Earth-Rootedness. He asserts that, being nearer the Earth degrades the value of life.
The opposition to liberal modernity was based on the belief that hierarchy and rootedness are more important than equality and liberty, with the latter two being dehumanizing.
When reflection's rootedness in such bodily, participatory modes > of experience is entirely unacknowledged or unconscious, reflective reason > becomes dysfunctional, unintentionally destroying the corporeal, sensuous > world that sustains it.
Meena Khorana in her study of Ruskin Bond's life and works cites Angry River as an example of his works' rootedness in the culture and traditions of India.
In his writings, this rootedness comes into vibrant contact with the new and the radical. He didn't deride his past or tradition in order to embrace the best of modern currents. Mullanezhi's important collections of poems are Mohapakshi, Raapattu, Naaranathupranthan and Penkoda.
Further, territoriality, the ability to exercise control over the space, is thought to be a central feature of the attachment to the home in that it embodies privacy. Of this, forms of attachment to the home are thought to include “home experience”, “rootedness” and “identity”.
Though cultural rootedness has its own merits, it was a setback for modernization. By the 1950s, there were a handful of Christian converts among the Zous too. But the Zou converts were disorganised and scattered. The new Zou Christian converts joined different dialectal groups, especially the Paite and Thado Christian groups.
'His origins, training and experience seem as if designed to produce that complex of rootedness and spiritual uprootedness that so often gives the artist's special oblique angle of view.'Lomas 1978, 7. National Press opinions of his early verseTimes Literary Supplement, Glasgow Herald, Birmingham Post, etc., cited in To Suffolk volume.
Myers, Holly. "A Dramatic Gaze up at the Hilltop," Los Angeles Times, January 28, 2005, p. E24. Focused on vernacular domestic architecture, the series both amplified and undermined its associations with solidity, rootedness and Southern California affluence through disorienting angles and perspectives, claustrophobic compositions and selective subtractions and additions.Tumlir, Jan.
The Wu Xing Earth is associated with the qualities of patience, thoughtfulness, practicality, hard work, and stability. The earth element is also nurturing and seeks to draw all things together with itself, in order to bring harmony, rootedness and stability. Other attributes of the earth element include ambition, stubbornness, responsibility and long-term planning.
The proximity of the square and the mosque, the abundance of water in the area and the rootedness of the baths among the Muslims make the environment of the plaza de las Fuentes a place full of lavatories and bathrooms. Less than a hundred meters from the Islamic Baths of Caballel are the Islamic Baños del Cenizal.
The character of Elisabeth is presented as a model of "German fidelity" and the sanctity of marriage,Fox, p. 58. and also of sacrifice, as often in Nazi images of women.Fox, p. 64. As a secondary thematic focus common in many Nazi films, the film contrasts country life and rootedness with internationality and urban sophistication, to the detriment of the latter.
"The Life of Rosa Cavalleri: An Application of Abramson's Model of Rootedness/ Rootlessness", by Vaneeta-Marie D' Andrea, is Chapter 10 of The Italian Americans Through the Generations: Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Conference of the American Italian Historical Association, Held at St. John's University, New York, October 29–30, 1982, Volume 15, by the American Italian Historical Association, Incorporated, 1986.
Shiau's first work, Heartland is an existential novel. It deals with the paradox of rootedness and rootlessness of Singaporeans born after the Japanese Occupation. The book received the Singapore Literature Prize Commendation Award in 1998, together with Alfian Sa'at's Corridor. Heartland was named by Singapore's English daily The Straits Times in December 1999, along with J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace, as one of the 10 Best Books of the Year.
The USFO is now very well established within Ulster-Scots communities, playing upwards of 80 gigs a year, and believe that maintaining this rootedness in the communities from which their musical practices come is vital. They believe that they have now reached a point, however, where they need to bring their sound, and the culture it is a part of, to a wider audience, both within Britain and Ireland, and internationally.
According to Kim, North Korea will not be affected by the fall of communism because North Korean socialism is of a different kind. This, Kim says, is because of its rootedness in the Juche ideology. This makes it a more authentic, and thus more enduring, socialism. Considered authoritative on Juche, the work contains no reformulation of the ideology and instead restates what was by then a standard account of its contents.
Moral Matters. A Philosophy of Homecoming (2015) is loosely based on his weekly column in the Irish Daily Mail. It is a philosophical work about home and rootedness, memory and identity, loss and love. Analyzing the alienation experienced by the self when disengaging from the social sphere surrounding it, Dooley shows how the self can become re-rooted to time and place and restored to full humanity whilst moving in the virtual, hyperconnected world.
The extraordinariness of human being is this being un- homely that is also a becoming homely. Heidegger makes clear that this being unhomely does not mean simply homelessness, wandering around, adventurousness, or lack of rootedness. Rather, it means that the sea and the land are those realms that human beings transform through skillfulness and use. The homely is that which is striven for in the violent activity of passing through the inhabitual.
Unlike some Nouvelle Droite activists who only adopted paganism as an intellectual position, Rollet saw it as an everyday attitude. He described what he called his "native faith" () as an individual approach based on rootedness, harmony with the cosmos, the constant search for physical and moral aesthetics, tolerance and respect for the "Other". Rollet held contact with the World Congress of Ethnic Religions based in Vilnius. His poetic works are marked by his neopaganism.
The rootedness of Die Freundin in a male-dominated association led to regular publications of calls for the abolition of § 175. This did not concern gay women directly, because only male same-sex behaviour was covered by § 175. Again and again, a possible tweaking of the paragraph was discussed, so that it should also include female homosexuality. Calls for the abolition appeared regularly in editions of the “Bundes für Menschenrecht”, partly also without explicit reference to lesbians.
It highlights that specific nexus of universal needs and capacities which explains the human productive process and man's organized transformation of the material environment; which process and transformation it treats in turn as the basis both of the social order and of historical change.' G.A. Cohen (1988, p. 84): 'The tendency's autonomy is just its independence of social structure, its rootedness in fundamental material facts of human nature and the human situation.' Allen Wood (2004, p.
Mitredon is an extinct genus of cynodonts which existed in the Fleming Fjord Formation of Greenland during the Late Triassic (Rhaetian) period. The type species is Mitredon cromptoni.Shapiro, M.D. and Jenkins Jr., F.A. (2001). "A cynodont from the Upper Triassic of East Greenland: tooth replacement and double-rootedness": In: Studies in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology in honor of A. W. Crompton, edited by Jenkins Jr, F.A., Shapiro, M.D., and Owerkowicz, T. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 156 (1): 49-58.
Due to numerous varying opinions on the definition and components of place attachment, organizational models have been scarce until recent years. A noteworthy conceptual framework is the Tripartite Model, developed by Scannell and Gifford (2010), which defines the variables of place attachment as the three P’s: Person, Process, and Place. When describing place attachment, scholars differentiate between a “rootedness” and a “sense of place”. Sense of place attachment arises as the result of cultivation of meaning and artifacts associated with created places.
Heartland is a novel by Daren Shiau, and is the first and best known of his five books. An existential work, Heartland deals with the paradox of rootedness and rootlessness of Singaporeans born after the Japanese Occupation. The book received the Singapore Literature Prize Commendation Award in 1998, together with Alfian Sa'at's Corridor. Heartland was named by Singapore's English daily The Straits Times in December 1999, along with J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace, as one of the 10 Best Books of the Year.
She encounters ancestors through nature with their "rich dark root fingers," showing appreciation for her heritage. At the end of the poem, she has found secret strength through staying afloat: > though i shivered > was wet with cold > and wanted to sink down > and float as water, yea-- > i can tell you. > i have shaken rivers > out of my eyes. > Estella M. Sales concludes that, in this poem, Rodgers "comes to recognize ... her own inner voice, her ancestral rootedness, her Christian faith, and her parental support".
The first, static sumud, is more passive and is defined by Ibrahim Dhahak as the "maintenance of Palestinians on their land." The second, resistance sumud (in Arabic, sumud muqawim) is a more dynamic ideology whose aim is to seek ways of building alternative institutions so as to resist and undermine the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. The ultimate symbol associated with the concept of sumud and the Palestinian sense of rootedness in the land is the olive tree, ubiquitous throughout Palestine.Schulz and Hammer, 2003, p. 105.
When he was asked to write the liturgy in October 1981, he had "considerable reservations". Thurian was mindful of the rootedness of liturgy in tradition rather than what the Lima Liturgy was intended to be: an expression of certain theological ideas at hand. Ultimately, Thurian agreed to draft the liturgy, seeking to write it based on traditional liturgical documents that he thought corresponded to the theology of BEM. The Lima Liturgy was not part of the BEM document, and its status was that of an unofficial appendix.
Centaur of the North, a collection of short stories linked by common words, plot elements, and themes, was written by South Texas author Wendell Mayo (Houston: Arte Público, 1996), with a second printing in 1999. This first short story collection by Corpus Christi author Wendell Mayo won the Premio Aztlán Literary Prize in 1996. The stories' settings move between Corpus Christi in South Texas and various cities in the Midwest, and they focus on families of dual heritage and the ideas of rootedness, tradition, language, and truth.
Lee's works serve as a means to express and internally reconcile her two dichotomous cultural worlds. Being Korean, but living in the US, she finds that neither place is her home. Lee says that her “…sense of ‘home’ is a spectrum of emotions...of yearning for belonging, wholeness, and rootedness.” The possibility that these two worlds might coexist is embedded deeply in her work. To her, “...art is a reflection of the human experience.” Lee’s work is meditative in both the ways it is made and conceived.
For the urban poor without work it's even worse, unemployment is described as "uprootedness squared." The gulf between high culture from the mass of the people that has been widening since the renaissance is another factor contributing to up rootedness. Education now has only limited effect in helping to create roots as academic culture has lost its connection both with this world and the next. Many academics have become obsessed with learning not for a desire for knowledge for its own sake but due to the utility it offers for attaining social prestige.
The school never engaged in Lacanian psychoanalysis. The group was formed around a young generation of Marxist students at the University of Ljubljana, in Socialist Slovenia. Contrary to their older colleagues, affiliated with the Praxis school, these young students rejected Marxist humanism and turned towards the "antihumanism" of the French Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser and, to a lesser extent, to the Frankfurt School. The main goal of the Ljubljana School was to re-interpret Marxism by emphasizing the rootedness of Karl Marx's thought in the tradition of German idealism.
Suketu Mehta is another writer currently based in the United States who authored Maximum City (2004), an autobiographical account of his experiences in the city of Mumbai. In 2008, Arvind Adiga received the Man Booker Prize for his debut novel The White Tiger. Recent writers in India such as Arundhati Roy and David Davidar show a direction towards contextuality and rootedness in their works. Arundhati Roy, a trained architect and the 1997 Booker prize winner for her The God of Small Things, calls herself a "home grown" writer.
The Cooperation Agreement established fiscal benefits and tax exemptions for the Islamic religious communities but did not stipulate a financial mechanism similar to the one for the Catholic Church. However, in the aftermath of the Madrid bombings of 2004, the Spanish government saw the need for integrating Muslims in Spanish society besides of formulating policies to ensure national security. In December 2004, the Foundation for Pluralism and Coexistence (FPC) was created to support programmes related to cultural, educative, and social integration for those religions with “deep-rootedness”, i.e. the Evangelic Church, Judaism, and Islam.
Due to internal conditions under Communist Romania after World War II, the expression's use was forbidden in publications until after the Romanian Revolution in 1989. The party's initial success was partly attributed to the deep rootedness of Ceaușescu's national communism in Romania. Both the ideology and the main political focus of the Greater Romania Party are reflected in frequently strongly nationalistic articles written by Tudor. The party has called for the outlawing of the ethnic Hungarian party, the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania, for allegedly plotting the secession of Transylvania.
Produced by Madhyam Communications, in collaboration with a few other voluntary organizations such as K.S. Muddappa Memorial Trust, CATS, and DEED, the play is a unique experiment to create awareness amongst youngsters about proverbs through theater. Built entirely on proverbs, ‘Hebbala’ means a huge banyan tree. It symbolizes the rootedness of proverbs and its potential to include a wide range of human experiences. Written and directed by Jayatheertha, the play consists of three short folk tales woven together using the village singer and story-teller as the link.
The name of the school comes from the Sanskrit term “mudra” meaning “gesture” or “sign. The school, once located where the Court of Cassation in Dakar is currently housed, was founded in 1977 by Leopolod Sédar Senghor and Maurice Béjart and funded by Senegal and Belgium, with support from UNESCO. Germaine Acogny, a Senegalese dancer and choreographer originally from Benin, who is probably the best-known and most influential forerunner of contemporary dance in the West-African region, was appointed director of the school from its opening. Mudra Afrique, with an international student body, emphasized the Senghorian concepts of both enracinement and ouverture, rootedness and openness.
Tuan is most interested in ambivalent human experiences that resonate with the opposing pulls of space and place, the intimate and the distant. His approach is suggested by titles such as Segmented Worlds and Self, Continuity and Discontinuity, Morality and Imagination, Cosmos and Hearth, Dominance and Affection, and above all, Space and Place. These existential dialectics propel people between a pole of experience characterized by rootedness, security and grounding, on the one hand, and a pole characterized by outreach, potentiality and expansiveness, on the other hand. These opposites interact: there is a certain distance in what is nearby and a certain nearness in what is far away.
The book was nonetheless unable quite to recapture the sheer comic energy and historic rootedness of its celebrated predecessor (lacking as it does the unifying thread that is the river Thames itself) and it has enjoyed only modest success by comparison. This said, some of the individual comic vignettes that make up "Bummel" are as fine as (or even finer than) those of "Boat". Jeremy Nicholas: Three Men in a Boat and on the Bummel—The story behind Jerome's two comic masterpieces In 1902, he published the novel Paul Kelver, which is widely regarded as autobiographical. His 1908 play The Passing of the Third Floor Back introduced a more sombre and religious Jerome.
Due to constant migration over the past few centuries, Americans are thought to most commonly have this type of place attachment, as they have not stayed in a place long enough to develop storied roots. Rootedness, on the other hand, is an unconscious attachment to a place due to familiarity achieved through continuous residence––perhaps that of a familial lineage that has known this place in the years before the current resident. Little is known about the neurological changes that make place attachment possible because of the exaggerated focus on social aspects by environmental psychologists, the difficulties in measuring place attachment over time, and the heavy influence of individualistic experiences and emotions on the degree of attachment.
On the political changes that were happening in the country, a collection of twenty essays organized by Felipe Demier and Rejane Hoeveler, titled The Conservative Wave – Essays on the Current Dark Times in Brazil, was launched in 2016. In the synopsis, professor emeritus José Paulo Netto characterizes the right-wing opposition as being downgrade of intelligence. It is also emphasized the rootedness of reactionary thinking and practices in Brazilian state powers and Brazilian society in multiple dimensions as well as the challenges that the left will have to face. However, many Brazilians who support Bolsonaro's government believe that the PT party's socialism and rampant corruption are to blame for difficulties in the Brazilian economy.
A great ballet-lover, he was to form a close friendship with the renowned ballet designer Nicholas Georgiadis in the 1970s. A keen member of the Chelsea Arts Club, he would spend much time meeting friends there towards the end of his life. It was perhaps an apt symbol that 1987, the year of his death, was also the year of the worst hurricane the UK had ever seen, uprooting many old and magnificent trees. The tree had always had a very special meaning for Jacques as borne out by so many of his paintings – perhaps something to do with their enduring strength, their ever- changing light and shade, their rootedness, their solitary nature – very much characteristics of Jacques himself.
In these works Rubin identifies Land of Israel Jewishness with Middle Eastern rootedness, as manifested by a large number of Yemenite or Arab figures, or by images of the Land of Israel landscape or foliage. Even in the 1920s this type of art was the object of criticism. Uri Zvi Greenberg, for example, rejected the symbolic depiction which could be seen in the works of many artists of the time. In Greenberg's view, these artists were simply providing illustrations for the literary subject – the exotic Middle Easterner – for whom the artist "dragged the Arab from the market and his donkey by the ear to the canvas".Uri Zvi Greenberg, “Draft of an article on an exhibition of Zaritsky in the Bezalel National Museum , Studio, No. 56 (September 1994), p. 6.
From 27 September 2006 to 7 January 2007, independent curator Pedro Alonszo's Spank the Monkey ran at the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead, UK. The exhibition brought together twenty two internationally recognized street artists and investigated street art's growing artistic quality and popular appeal (particularly in the United Kingdom) and its rootedness in the realms of graphic design and global youth culture.BALTIC Exhibition Archive, "Spank the Monkey." The exhibition included celebrated "fine artists" such as Barry McGee, Takashi Murakami, and Ryan McGinness alongside noted graffiti, street, and design artists such as Os Gemeos, Shepard Fairey, Banksy, and FAILE. Spank the Monkey was the first exhibition of its kind, and followed closely behind the commercial success of Fairey's Obey line, and Banksy's "Barely Legal" sale of his own work in Los Angeles.
The Wagner-Pfitzner stance contrasted ideas of other notable artists, such as Arnold Schoenberg and Theodor W. Adorno, who wanted music to be autonomous from politics, Nazi control and application. Although Wagner and Pfitzner came before the Third Reich, their sentiments and thoughts, Wagner's Gesamtkunstwerk, were appropriated by Hitler and his propagandists—notably Joseph Goebbels. According to Michael Meyer, "The very emphasis on rootedness and on tradition music underscored Nazi understanding of itself in a dialectic terms: old gods were mobilized against the false values of the immediate past to offer legitimacy to the epiphany of Adolf Hitler and the music representation of his realm." Composers, librettists, educators, critics, and especially musicologists, through their public statements, intellectual writings, and journals contributed to the justification of a totalitarian blueprint to be implanted through nazification.
He reflects on rootedness, finds much to admire both ways, going and staying, and finds a secret language and camaraderie among truckers. At the end of the section, Steinbeck arrives in Chicago to meet up with his wife. After dropping off Charley at a groomer's, he gets to his hotel early and finds his room not ready yet. Being tired and scruffy, he makes a deal with the hotel to borrow a room which hasn't been cleaned up after its last occupant, and once in the room investigates what the previous tenant, whom he refers to as "Harry," has left behind, constructing a half- grounded, half-fictional idea of him as a traveling businessman who hires a woman to spend the evening with, though Steinbeck believes neither enjoyed their time that much.
Yet, So he dialogued with people (common people, youth of all religions and their families, from his youth group, and all over the country and abroad, not forgetting to talk over controversial issues with academics and University professors, too). And he eventually formulated an understanding of "common human nature, adequately understood" (the phrase is from the medieval Francisco Suárez SJ and listed the following four conditions for considering a being human: embodiedness, a social dimension, rootedness in the world and a capacity for transcendence (the ability to go beyond the space-time boundaries). Thus it is not absolutely necessary to believe in God or be religious to be fully human; but one must be, at least, spiritual and open to transcendence.For details please see his notes on "Towards a Philosophy of Liberation" or "General Ethics" (JDV, Pune).
Vitarka mudra, Tarim Basin, 9th century In yoga the gesture is known as chin mudra ("the seal of consciousness") when the palm is face down, or jnana mudra ("the seal of wisdom") when the palm is face up or held in other positions, such as in front of the heart. Some schools of yoga use chin and jnana mudra interchangeably, while others claim that "the former produces a subtle feeling of rootedness, the latter a sense of lightness," or that jnana "the passive receiving position" while chin "is an actively giving position". In these mudras the middle, ring, and little fingers represent the three gunas of rajas, tamas, and sattva which, when in harmony, unite ātman and brahman, or the individual soul and universal soul. The pressing together of the thumb and forefinger represents that union—or "yoga"—of consciousness.
Henry C. Mustin, Bremerton, Washington, 1934 High school graduation Midshipman 2/C Henry C. Mustin and Lucy H. Mustin Midshipman 1/C Henry C. Mustin, 1955 A Navy junior, Hank Mustin was born in Bremerton, Washington, on 31 August 1933, as the sixth generation of distinguished naval officers and great-nephew of George Barnett, the 12th Commandant of the Marine Corps. He was the son of Vice Admiral Lloyd Montague Mustin and Emily Proctor Mustin, and namesake of his late grandfather Captain Henry C. Mustin a pioneering naval aviator. Of her eldest son, Henry Croskey Mustin, Emily would often say that he "was born with his feet planted firmly on the ground." In the late 1940s, while attending St. Stephen's School in Alexandria, VA, he acquired the nickname Hank, as if to reinforce a rootedness, despite his many moves as a Navy junior.
Situated next to the historic Schlitz Brewing Complex of the same era, the Fourth Street School, now the Meir School lower campus, was designed in 1889 by noted Milwaukee architect Henry C. Koch in Romanesque Revival style. Hallmarks of the style are the rough stone foundation (to give it a sense of rootedness) and the round-topped arches. The school was completed by 1890 and opened its doors on September 2, 1890. H-shaped in plan, the school building has four stories (basement included) and contains 16 classrooms along with an auditorium. A single story heating plant was added in 1915, with a fuel room to follow in 1937. Fire escapes and enclosure of the stairways brought the building up to code in 1957. Renovation of the interior and exterior took place in 1976, during which a cafeteria was added. Golda Meir had three classrooms in grade 3, grade 4, and grade 5.
The debate about Swiss identity in Switzerland at the turn of the 19th–20th century concerned what constituted Swiss identity: geographical location or race – French, German or Italian. Ritter considered Swiss who spoke French had a Latin identity. Ritter's theory of culture had a profound influence on the thinking of the Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier, who was a friend of Ritter in Munich, where they both lived, Ritter being something of a "mentor" to Le Corbusier from 1910 to 1916, assuming the fatherly role that had previously been filled by the Swiss painter Charles l'Eplattenier. Ritter's notion that identity was a product of rootedness in a particular location (provoking his ancillary dislike of rootless Americans, city-dwelling Germans and Jews), together with his lifelong affection for Slavs, made a deep impression on Le Corbusier, and was a decisive influence on his journey through the Balkans during his trip to the east in 1911, during which he studied Balkan vernacular architecture.
Other communities may seem to be defined primarily according to territory, as in the case of neighbourhoods, but even in such cases, proximity or shared territory cannot by itself constitute a community; the relational dimension is also essential. Factor analysis of their urban neighbourhoods questionnaire yielded two distinct factors that Riger and Lavrakas (1981) characterized as "social bonding" and "physical rootedness", very similar to the two dimensions proposed by Gusfield. Early work on psychological sense of community was based on neighborhoods as the referent, and found a relationship between psychological sense of community and greater participation (Hunter, 1975; Wandersman & Giamartino, 1980), perceived safety (Doolittle & McDonald, 1978), ability to function competently in the community (Glynn, 1981), social bonding (Riger & Lavrakas, 1981), social fabric (strengths of interpersonal relationship) (Ahlbrandt & Cunningham, 1979), greater sense of purpose and perceived control (Bachrach & Zautra, 1985), and greater civic contributions (charitable contributions and civic involvement) (Davidson & Cotter, 1986). These initial studies lacked a clearly articulated conceptual framework, however, and none of the measures developed were based on a theoretical definition of psychological sense of community.
Hake, p. 119. The interiors, by Erich Kettelhut, a co-designer on Metropolis, have symbolic force;Hake, p. 54. in particular, Charlotte Garvenberg is surrounded by mirrors, suggesting narcissism, preoccupied with her own happiness at the expense of her husband or other integration into society, so that her fate in the film "in a way, rehearses the conditions under which [Weimar] culture came to an end", in selfishness, "erotic obsessions" and "empty rituals".Hake, p. 120; Carter, p. 214. In contrast Erich Garvenberg and Hanna are both guided by duty, and Garvenberg is a decisive leader and Hanna is able to draw strength from her rootedness in German culture and her healthy maternal feelings. Sierck stated in an interview that he saw melodrama in its original and etymological sense, as "music + drama".John Halliday, Sirk on Sirk, New York: Viking, 1972, excerpted in Lucy Fischer, ed., Imitation of Life: Douglas Sirk, Director, Rutgers films in print 16, New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University, 1991, pp. 226–36 p. 227; cited in Hake, p.

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