Forms
One form of guerrilla communication is the creation of a ritual via participative public spectacle to disrupt or protest a public event or to shift the perspectives of passers-by. Such spectacles often take the form of street and guerrilla theater. Another way to create such spectacle is via tactical frivolity. Pie-throwing as performance art is a form of guerrilla communication. Other forms of guerrilla communication include adbusting, graffiti, hacktivism (notably cybersquatting), and reclaiming.
A good actual example of guerrilla communication are the demonstrations taking place since 15 May 2011 in Spain and cities in other countries, such as London, Berlin or Paris. These demonstrations, organized through the Internet, are trying to create awareness among the population about other ways to manage governments, using the motto "Real Democracy NOW!".
Read more about this topic: Guerrilla Communication
Other articles related to "forms, form":
... Oracle Forms is a software product for creating screens that interact with an Oracle database ... The primary focus of Forms is to create data entry systems that access an Oracle database ...
... Form (web), a document form used on a web page to, typically, submit user data to a server Form (programming), a component-based representation of a GUI window FORM (symbolic ...
... Phaedo, Plato formulated his famous Theory of Forms as distinct and immaterial substances of which the objects and other phenomena that we perceive in the world are ... Plato makes it clear, in the Phaedo, that the Forms are the universalia ante res, i.e ... Plato's forms are non-physical and non-mental ...
... She is one who is source of all forms of goddesses ... She is worshiped as one with many forms and name ... Her different mood brings different forms or incarnation ...
Famous quotes containing the word forms:
“Your letter is come; it came indeed twelve lines ago, but I
could not stop to acknowledge it before, & I am glad it did not
arrive till I had completed my first sentence, because the
sentence had been made since yesterday, & I think forms a very
good beginning.”
—Jane Austen (17751817)
“For forms of Government let fools contest;
Whateer is best administered is best.”
—Alexander Pope (16881744)
“The strongest and most effective [force] in guaranteeing the long-term maintenance of ... power is not violence in all the forms deployed by the dominant to control the dominated, but consent in all the forms in which the dominated acquiesce in their own domination.”
—Maurice Godelier (b. 1934)