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demarcation |
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demarcationIn British industrial relations, the practice of stipulating that particular workers should perform particular tasks. The practice can be the source of industrial disputes. |
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| Jerusalem must somehow be politically shared between Israelis and Palestinians and new boundaries must be drawn there also--but the boundaries must demarcate, not exclude. Such flags not only demarcate individuality but also help point out where one's seats are amid the sea of humanity should a member of the party venture out for beer or one of the festival's delicious and shockingly reasonably priced delicacies (mouth-watering soft-shell crab po'-boys go for a mere $8, and a bowl of some of the best gumbo you're likely to enjoy is only $5). Punctuated by intertitles that demarcate fifteen "pages," the film insinuates a relationship to contemporaneous structuralist cinema--think of the wall-mounted seascape photograph that is central to (and literally at the center of) Michael Snow's forty-five-minute zoom in Wavelength, 1967. |
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