composer and audience, there is a sturdy footing from which the composer can better get their message across to their responders. The many different ‘faces’ of belonging can be used by composers through techniques such as inclusive language, “The Other” concept or pathos, in order to influence their audience into feeling the way they want them to – with the aim of successfully achieving their purpose. This connection creates a strong
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Everyday is considered a small part of our lives but some are more significant than others. An example of this would be someone considering their wedding day being way more significant than a normal day in high school or just going to work. If everyday is the same length, exact same number of hours,minutes, and seconds, isn’t a greater objective achieved on one day just as significant as a small one on another? The significance of an event is assigned by the person who lived through that event
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It's been said that, "boredom is God's way of telling you that you are wasting time." It's an excellent matter that we are in a fantastic generation that we are never genuinely bored. We consistently have our whole week planned with our very busy schedules. We always have something to do, so we are never really bored. It states in the passage that boredom can be agony. Boredom leads to anxiety along with atrocious decision making, it can be destructive. People who can't cope with it
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Definition is the exact meaning of a word, without reference to external examples to explain the meaning. It is challenging to define something, because it can get complicated when it comes to finding the exact words to use so that someone can understand the true meaning. The importance of definition is that it creates a common understanding of a word so that it can be applied and understood in the same way by interpreters. When a definition is not exact this allows it to be open to interpretation
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A question often asked is, who are we? Is it a question that questions a person’s biological factors or what others see of them? This is the where the idea of the self and identity comes in. The self are the inborn characteristics that they are born with. Some examples are the physical characteristics that distinguish a person from other people, such as, gender and mental stability. The identity is how society shapes a person to be whom they want to be. Influences such as family, friends and communities
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Nayef Al-Rodhan once said, “Divisive leaders emphasize our differences, but speak little of the dangers of isolationism.” Connections suffer immensely when isolation moves in. Sometimes we pay so much attention to each other’s differences that we forget about overcoming them. By focusing on what makes us different and not on what makes us the same, we allow isolationism to take over. Therefore, the connections we have are greatly influenced by the efforts we make in understanding ourselves and others
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Summer Moser Nora Khani Morgan Parker Michael Gleason De Beauvoir <definitions via Michael> According to De Beauvoir, in order to be a genuinely free, ethical individual, people first must embrace their ambiguity as both a subject and an object, having facticity and freedom. There is a frozen past, which nothing can be done about, and an unknown future, in which anything can be done. Facticity constrains a person to their physical limits, social barriers, and expectations and political
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Are we what we think? Are we what we do? Are we what we repeatedly do? One of humanity's burning questions revolves around what it means to be yourself: who am I? Initially, the question was explored through philosophy in an attempt to find the answer. However, as time passed and other disciplines emerged, other fields, in addition to philosophy, also seek for a solution to the question; social psychology is one of those fields. One of the models in social psychology that attempts to answer the
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The narrative concept has several consequences. For example, the first one can be described that even though other can influence us, “it is up to us to make something of ourselves in what we do” (127). The second and third theories deal with materialistic things and our
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Interviews First Interview Informant A is a Bay Ridge resident of 15 years. Originally from a small city in Eastern Europe, he emigrated to the United States and settled in the area. He attributes his choice of housing to Bay Ridge’s reputation as a safe, quiet area with a suburban feel. He values the region’s cultural diversity and has built a strong community ties for himself and his family. For improvement, informant A suggests finding more ways to bring all the diverse ethnic groups together
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