In liberation, rebellion, and relevance "Rebellion against the human rebellion", Albert Camus (1956) thought that disobedience and absurd origin of art and its importance to individuals and society. As I read the coronation ceremony, I began thinking about the importance of art and how stubborn the trends in education and art financing are. This is the reason I got to write this paper, but my aim is not to solve many issues of public funding for art education and art directly.
The purpose of this paper is to clarify the art as an adaptive tool in sociology and psychology processes of antisocial liberation and the inevitable function of art is to clarify the importance of art in everyday life It is to show that. What is the role of art in rebellion and liberation? These roles are similar in type and scale among people, and why is this important? - Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) As we all know, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is one of North America's largest collections, especially one of the most popular collections in the western United States. (Compton 165). The giant museum houses more than 100,000 works of art from ancient times to today (Gilbert and Mills 174).
Lisa McGirr explains the story of this book in "Suburban Warriors: New Americans' Rights and New American Rights". Most people believe that the 1960s are anti-culture, rebellion against the present situation, and the liberalization of the country, but most people do not fully reflect the situation in the United States. Along with the rise of hippies, the rise of the grassroots conservative crusade, the Crusades emerged and was rebuilt as a country of Christians. In addition, the civil rights movement and the poverty war are the causes of the "small revolution" of these suburban warriors, they are threatened by government's economic initiative based on the interests of ethnic minorities and their "taxation" Those people "to help.
Contemporary anti-American leftist species germinate in Neorehutz's rebellion against classical liberalism after World War II. Like the New Deal tradition, liberalism strongly supports the civil rights movement and eradicates social causes based on poverty and other inequality improvement. Internationally, this 'central' post-World War II liberalism adamantly objected to Communist totalitarianism. In fact, recognizing the threat of the Soviet Union and participating in the Soviet Union through containment policies was not a conservative movement, but a "Cold War liberal".