Film analysis 1 Crossword
Down:
1) Book: style in which we conduct social relationship. Our culture lacks caring among its members. Care – a species activity that includes everything that we do to maintain, continue, and repair our ‘world’ so that we can live in it as well as possible. “The sum of rules by which the individual came to terms with pain, sickness and death, interpreted them, and practiced compassion towards others faced by the same threats.
i.e. myths, taboos
Male autonomy as basis for care – more acceptable.3) Book: Silent or audible signals exchanged @ auctions. Elaborate motions employed by baseball coaches. Body language: (a shrug, bowing one’s head, throwing up one’s hands). Language can be spoken, written, unspoken or unwritten. Hobo’s (transients) – developed a more or less standardized set of signs that were chalked, painted, or scratched on walls, posts or fences to inform fellow hobos what to expect. The key to non-verbal is the consensus of meaning attached to symbols and their manipulations. Shaking of hands, embrace, bowing or removal of a hat. Colors can mean different things to different cultures (cross-cultural comparisons). Blue – depressed, yellow cowardly, red radically inclined – while white can mean purity to most Europeans i.e. wedding dress but to Asians mean mourning death. In Russia red is beautiful. Language structures reality; the form and variability of the language determine how members of the culture will view reality and structure their thoughts. Politically correct terminology i.e. mailman referred to as mail carrier, policeman referred to as law officer.4) Book:
• Amplifiers of sensory capacities; for example, microscopes, telescopes, telephones, television, clocks, spectacles, radar, conch shells, and “mind-expanding” drugs (such as peyote, in some cultures) Peyote has a long history of ritualistic and medicinal use by indigenous Americans.
• Amplifiers of motor capacities, for example, hammers, wheels, the lever, rickets and automobiles
• Amplifiers of reasoning and thinking capacities, for example, mathematical systems, logic, the abacus, the computer, and the chalkboard (a major educational invention, in its time).7) Book: Family is constant the form of family is variable. There is no “normal form” of family. The form of the family is influenced by the culture in which it exists; in turn, the family form influences the culture. The human family, then, is a system, a Holon, and it has a simultaneous existence as part of a whole.10) Book: “thinking man”. Humans are unique in that not only can they think, but that they can externalize the thought process itself, possibly in three ways: 1) the computer – the computer is the externalization of human thought 2) the creation of biocomputers – experimenting with living cells as material from which to construct computer. Human reproduction – every baby is, in a very limited sense, a human biocomputers 3) cloning. |
Across:
2) Book: style in which we conduct social relationship. Our culture lacks caring among its members. Care – a species activity that includes everything that we do to maintain, continue, and repair our ‘world’ so that we can live in it as well as possible. “The sum of rules by which the individual came to terms with pain, sickness and death, interpreted them, and practiced compassion towards others faced by the same threats.
i.e. myths, taboos
Male autonomy as basis for care – more acceptable.5) Book: Family is constant the form of family is variable. There is no “normal form” of family. The form of the family is influenced by the culture in which it exists; in turn, the family form influences the culture. The human family, then, is a system, a Holon, and it has a simultaneous existence as part of a whole.6) religion, caring, belonging8) religion, caring, belonging9) Book: Silent or audible signals exchanged @ auctions. Elaborate motions employed by baseball coaches. Body language: (a shrug, bowing one’s head, throwing up one’s hands). Language can be spoken, written, unspoken or unwritten. Hobo’s (transients) – developed a more or less standardized set of signs that were chalked, painted, or scratched on walls, posts or fences to inform fellow hobos what to expect. The key to non-verbal is the consensus of meaning attached to symbols and their manipulations. Shaking of hands, embrace, bowing or removal of a hat. Colors can mean different things to different cultures (cross-cultural comparisons). Blue – depressed, yellow cowardly, red radically inclined – while white can mean purity to most Europeans i.e. wedding dress but to Asians mean mourning death. In Russia red is beautiful. Language structures reality; the form and variability of the language determine how members of the culture will view reality and structure their thoughts. Politically correct terminology i.e. mailman referred to as mail carrier, policeman referred to as law officer.11) Book: the transfer of meaning between systems and between subsystems we act on our interpretations of their intentions and judgment. Gestures are an important kind of symbolic communication, and are response to the meaning as we interpret them.
kiss = expression of affection
drawn back clenched fist = as threat of aggression
smile = expression of pleasure
frown = expression of displeasure
Looking glass self
(1) The imagination of our appearance to others;
(2) The imagination of their judgment
(3) A self-feeling in response to the imagined judgment
Language is a means of setting and maintaining cultural boundaries. Social work jargon - excludes other professions. Teenage Texting in code – excludes parents.
Consensus of meaning with a high degree of precision is difficult to achieve.12) Book: the transfer of meaning between systems and between subsystems we act on our interpretations of their intentions and judgment. Gestures are an important kind of symbolic communication, and are response to the meaning as we interpret them.
kiss = expression of affection
drawn back clenched fist = as threat of aggression
smile = expression of pleasure
frown = expression of displeasure
Looking glass self
(1) The imagination of our appearance to others;
(2) The imagination of their judgment
(3) A self-feeling in response to the imagined judgment
Language is a means of setting and maintaining cultural boundaries. Social work jargon - excludes other professions. Teenage Texting in code – excludes parents.
Consensus of meaning with a high degree of precision is difficult to achieve.13) Book: to seek and maintain territory. Some workplaces are large, open spaces without walls, “industrial” or warehouse in style, in which workers have areas, rather than enclosed spaces; the usual intent is to convey an atmosphere of creativity and fluidity i.e. workplace is round. Refers to the cultural ways people locate themselves in their universe and establish the boundaries of their various human systems.14) Book: economic systems required greater mobility – extended family began to dissipate. Intro. of babysitter, housedads, day cares for children/elderly. Public school system – “equality” & “the importance of knowledge”.15) Book: “thinking man”. Humans are unique in that not only can they think, but that they can externalize the thought process itself, possibly in three ways: 1) the computer – the computer is the externalization of human thought 2) the creation of biocomputers – experimenting with living cells as material from which to construct computer. Human reproduction – every baby is, in a very limited sense, a human biocomputers 3) cloning.16) Book: Economic status, social status and political power. Parent, child, voter and worshipper. Role=status
Male/female, professional, elderly/young, minister/lay person) including attitudes, values & behavior. Role expectations are defined by the culture and its components, and incorporated by the persons filling the role.17) Book: economic systems required greater mobility – extended family began to dissipate. Intro. of babysitter, housedads, day cares for children/elderly. Public school system – “equality” & “the importance of knowledge”.18) Book:
• Amplifiers of sensory capacities; for example, microscopes, telescopes, telephones, television, clocks, spectacles, radar, conch shells, and “mind-expanding” drugs (such as peyote, in some cultures) Peyote has a long history of ritualistic and medicinal use by indigenous Americans.
• Amplifiers of motor capacities, for example, hammers, wheels, the lever, rickets and automobiles
• Amplifiers of reasoning and thinking capacities, for example, mathematical systems, logic, the abacus, the computer, and the chalkboard (a major educational invention, in its time). |
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