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    Imagination Out of Focus

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    Michelle Gualpa Ms. Parker English 10 June 5‚ 2012 Imagination Out of Focus When I was really‚ really small‚ I was very imaginative. I thought the world was limitless. I could very well convince myself that a purple polka-dotted elephant could go to the moon on a flying building or that a bird could realistically deliver babies to awaiting parents. Then‚ when I turned seven‚ I found out that most of the kids in my class believed in Santa Claus. I didn’t know who this man was‚ and was very surprised

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    According to C. Wright Mills‚ The Sociological Imagination is the “vivid awareness of the relationship between personal experience and the wider society.” The Sociological Imagination is used to view situations in many social contexts‚ understanding how individuals and situations can be influenced by interactions and actions. A topic that would be interesting to study would be regarding the obesity epidemic. Being overweight can be considered a personal trouble by anyone who faces it‚ resulting from

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    Within the reading‚ Bronowski is attempting to clarify the meaning of imagination and how imagination helps human to build their insight and life. The power of imagination is unlimited and it is one of the ways that characterizes a human. Bronowski writes that “imagination is a specifically human gift” (3). This is one of the principal qualities that recognize human. Bronowski calls attention to that animal can’t manipulate pictures in their heads. An investigation which Walter Hunter led in 1910

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    Question 2 | | 1 / 1 point | Paradoxically‚ using our sociological imagination helps us _____. | | create an image of how people in other societies live | | | develop hypotheses that we can test with statistical data | | | make the familiar strange | | | understand the theories developed by Marx‚ Weber‚ and Durkheim | Question 3 | | 0 / 1 point | Which of the following is an example of using one’s sociological imagination? | | being in

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    Facts vs Imagination

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    Facts vs. Imagination Facts are facts; they will not disappear whereas imagination will change as human being goes through different channels and growth. Charles Dickens was great renowned writer. In his story “Hard Times” he showed how students reacted when a teacher taught them only about facts. The students were uncomfortable. This made the students thought that studying and learning is not an easy task. But education is all about making hard things easier. What is fact? Something that

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    Jane Austen ’s Emma and the Romantic Imagination "To see a world in a grain of sand And a heaven in a wild flower Hold infinity in the palm of your hand And eternity in an hour." —William Blake‚ ‘Auguries of Innocence ’ Imagination‚ to the people of the eighteenth century of whom William Blake and Jane Austen are but two‚ involves the twisting of the relationship between fantasy and reality to arrive at a fantastical point at which a world can be extrapolated from a single grain of sand‚ and all

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    unique perspective offered by the discipline of sociology can be described as the sociological imagination‚ a term coined by C. Wright Mills in his 1959 work entitled‚ The Sociological Imagination. Ferrante defines Mills’ sociological imagination as “a quality of mind that allows people to grasp how remote and impersonal social forces shape their life story or biography.” Essentially‚ the sociological imagination is a fresh perspective which allows one to look beyond the scope of their personal realm and

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    the first chapter a guy named C. Wright Mills said “The sociological Imagination is defined as the ability to understand the one’s own issues are not caused simply by one’s own beliefs or thoughts but by society and how it is structured.” (Mills‚ The Promise‚ 1959). Meaning that one person can not solve the problem until they understand that the problem cannot be solved and must be addresses on the social level. Social imagination is the ability to see the structure of society and

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    Theme: Power of imagination Joe Wright’s film Atonement is the story told through the eyes of main protagonist Briony Tallis. The story centers on her attempts to wash away her guilt and find atonement for her actions that began with a lie that ruined the lives and happiness of her beloved sister‚ Cecilia‚ and her sister’s lover‚ Robbie. Her actions forever changed the course of not only their lives but also her own. These actions were the outcome of mere overactive imagination of a young girl

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    Applying the Sociological Imagination Assignment Sociological Imagination is to think yourself away from the familiar routines of everyday life‚ and look at them from an entirely new perspective. Looking outside the box. Someone with a sociological imagination might view a homeless person as a person who has had hard times. They might ask questions as to what brought them to homelessness. Did they lose their job? Did they abuse drugs or alcohol? What are the circumstances that brought them

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