series on cultural stereotypes Contents 中文摘要 III Abstract IV Chapter I. Introduction 1 Chapter II. An Overview of Cultural Stereotype 1 2.1 Definitions of Cultural Stereotype 1 2.2Classification of Cultural Stereotype 2 2.3Characteristics of Cultural Stereotype 2 2.3.1 inevitability and University of Cultural Stereotype 2 2.3.2 Stability of Cultural Stereotype 3 2.3.3 Changeability of Cultural stereotype 4 2.4Effects of Cultural stereotype in Intercultural
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Stereotyping A stereotype is to believe unfairly that all people or things with a particular characteristic are the same. Stereotyping has become such a common thing in our society that they are often used in; in job interviews‚ in the media‚ and even when people meet one another in person. African Americans have been subject to stereotyping due to the color of their skin dating back to American colonization. Slave owners perpetuated the idea that African Americans could not think for themselves
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people’s stories. That’s where you start to break down stereotypes” (Stephanie Beatriz). It is important that you know what stereotypes are because you may not know when you are actually stereotyping someone. It impacts us because we automatically think about the bad in people without actually getting to know the people for who they truly are. A stereotype is how you view someone without truly knowing the person that you are judging. Stereotypes can be defined as judgements that people make against
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Stereotypes are used and seen every day in life by people. The reasons for why people use stereotypes is an endless list. The book Whistling Vivaldi by Claude M. Steele talks about how identity threat affects different type of people through experiments. Some experiments Steele talked about in his book was “Brown eyes‚ Blue Eyes” and an intelligent test done by Jean Claude and Theresa Claire. Throughout the book most of the experiments show how identity threat affects people negatively through making
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A huge giant is stalking through a small village of wee people‚ who are scattering through the streets trying to escape the ugly creature. The giant notices one particularly beautiful blonde woman scampering down the cobble-stoned street. He stretches out his clumsy arm and sweeps her up‚ then stress in wonder at the slight‚ shivering figure in his palm. “You are so beautiful‚” he exclaims. The young woman looks up in fear. “I would never hurt you‚” he signs‚ “I love you! We should get MARRIED
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Aleeza Safdar 2015-10-0106 SS-100 Writing and Communication Raazia Waseem November 18‚ 2011. Stereotypes exist because they are grounded in truth. Why hasn’t anyone ever seen a ‘’white crow’’ flying under a ‘’yellow sky’’? Why hasn’t someone ever experienced a ‘’really hot’’ winter season? Indeed why hasn’t my best friend yet told me‚ how she was once a popular Hollywood star? Clearly‚ because their lies no truth in the statements that I have put forward. One cannot see a white
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memories‚ he truly assembled a universe in his mind that he could relay expertly with his words on paper. However‚ in his second book‚ Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‚ Twain does not only use the memories he has of the South‚ he uses the common stereotypes alive in the South. This is why‚ throughout the time that students and scholars have poured over Twain’s Huckleberry Finn‚ the book has come under harsh criticism and oftentimes been banned from
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We Are All Biased: Why We Stereotype We are hard-wired to be biased... According to psychologists that is. As per them‚ even those of us who think that we do not stereotype‚ do so automatically: based on race‚ nationality‚ profession‚ sex‚ etc. But before you protest‚ there’s an instinctive reason for this. Our survival made it important that we became social and so humans have for centuries needed to know who to trust. And since it is impossible to categorize every single person we interact with
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Summary: In Chapter 5‚ Steele examined some interesting types of stereotype threat. Ted McDougal‚ the one of the two white students‚ enrolled in the African American science class; a group of white male math students compared themselves with Asian Americans-- positive stereotype in math; and a group of lower-class students attempted on a test related to language ability. All these people under stereotype threats were trying hard to prove themselves did not align with their social identities. Under
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"Stereotype‚ whether positive or negative‚ are harmful" In today’s world‚ many people has different stereotype about somebody. There are positive and negative‚ but both of them are harmful to people. People always stereotype about other people who they don’t fully know them. In Archbishop Riordan High School‚ most of the students think Chinese students are very good at math. In fact‚ some of the Chinese students are very bad at math. This maybe harmful to those Chinese students who did badly
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