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A generalized statement of belief or value (links 2 or more words or signs- A=B) |
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The act of defending or explaining or making excuses for by reasoning (relates to social drama) |
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a process that has four stages: offense, call to redress, account and response BASICALLY: a situation where someone invokes a moral rule, is questioned, has opportunity to respond, and the response is either accepted or is denied |
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Narrative or story with a sacred element, fictive |
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A socially constructed and historically transmitted pattern of symbols, meanings, premises and rules |
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A vehicle for conception, tangible formulations of notions, abstractions from experience fixed in perceptable forms, concrete embodiments of ideas, attitudes, judgements, longings or beliefs |
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prescription, proscription, preference or permission |
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Telling of an event, or a series of events, either true or fictitious (elements of story: agents, actions, results, agency) |
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what is, what can be, attributes, existence, possibility |
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Structured sequence of symbolic actions, the correct performance of which pays hommage to a sacred object |
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systematically arranged collection of signs and of their meanings, rules and laws |
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A system of socially constructed symbols and meanings, premises and rules pertaining to comunicative conduct |
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Socially constructed and historically transmitted system of symbols and meanings pertaining to communication. A system that is part of a larger culture. Connects and links one phenomena with another. Specifies what should and shouldn't be done |
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Rule of Communicative Conduct |
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A prescription for how to act under specific circumstances, which has force in a particular social group |
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4 key parts of a social drama |
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Offense Call to Redress (challenge) Account (respond to challenge) Response (to the response) |
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1. The study of distinctive ways of communicating in commercial conversations 2. The meaningful, consequential activity by which individuals and communities come to terms with what they are and will be |
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Ethnography of Speaking (2 assumptions) |
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1.Speaking varies cross culturally 2. Speaking is a key to social life |
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3 assumptions of speaking |
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speaking is social speaking is distinctive speaking is structured |
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What do each letter in the S-P-E-A-K-I-N-G model represent |
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s-scene p-participants e-ends a-acts k-key (tone) i-instrumentalities n-norms g-genres |
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Close, open, supportive speech |
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Name 2 things Johanna Kramer felt blocked her from having a "self" |
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1.The freedom to persue a career and achieve personal development 2. "communication" with Ted, to talk through her problem of feeling emotionally constricted |
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6 Propositions of Speech Codes Theory (name first 2) |
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1. Wherever there is a distinctive culture, there is to be found a distinctive speech code 2. In any given speech community, multiple speech codes are deployed |
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6 Propositions of Speech Codes Theory (middle 2) |
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3. A speech code implicates a culturally distinctive psychology, sociology, and rhetoric. 4. The significance of speaking is contingent upon the speech codes used by intelocutors to consititute the meaning of communicative acts |
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6 Propositions of Speech Codes Theory (Proposition 5) |
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5. The artful use of a shared speech code is a sufficient condition for predicting, explaining, and controlling the form of discourse about the intelligibility, prudence, and morality of communicative conduct |
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In Mayor Daley's city council speech what was he accused of doing? (one word) |
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Rules are made up of 3 things: |
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symbols meanings premises |
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Other codes are: (not speech codes) |
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"Kinship" code "Religion" code "Political" code |
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Terms related to "nacirema" |
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communication self relationship work |
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A historically situated, ongoing communicative process in which participants in the life of a social world costruct, express and negotiate the terms on which they conduct their lives together. |
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Coming to terms with culture- identify several things people might try to accomplish |
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1. Do something in interaction with others when a dominant code works against them 2. Know how to learn another code- (prop.5) pay attention to communicative conduct 3. Integrate two codes in one life when both have importance to you |
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In Mayor Daley's council speech, name two values that are part of a code of honor that he appeals to in his speech |
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Loyalty (caring for a friend and relative) Courage (moral fiber necessary to face other men in the struggle over desirable things) |
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Albert Einstein statement: "God may be subtle but not plain mean." is used to describe what assumption? |
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To speak of Teamsterville culture is not to speak of a place or a social unit but to speak of a_______. |
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Edward Sapir quote: "Speech varies without assignable limit as we pass from social group to social group." What assumption does this describe? |
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Walter Ong statement: "Oral communication unites people in groups." What assumption does this articulate? |
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Name two codes that exist in many cultures |
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Code of honor Code of dignity |
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Proposition 4 of speech codes theory states... |
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The significance of speaking is contingent upon the speech code used by interlocutors to constitute the meanings of communicative acts. |
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This assumption says that there is an order to speech, such as saying "b'bye" at the end of a phone call. |
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This assumption uses the cultural responses to a compliment as an example |
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This assumption says that solidarity, status, and intimacy are communicated through speech |
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Relationship and Communication are two words we are asked to write an... |
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interpretive analysis of. |
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Wherever there is a distinctive culture there is to be found.... |
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..a distinctive speech code. (proposition 1 of speech codes theory) |
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In any given speech community... |
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...multiple speech codes are deployed. (proposition 2 of speech codes theory) |
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A speech code implicates a culturally distinctive... |
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..psychology, sociology and rhetoric. (proposition 3 of speech codes theory) |
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The artful use of a shared speech code is a sufficient condition for_______, _______,and ________ the form of discourse about the intelligibility, prudence and morality of communicative conduct. (proposition 5 of speech codes theory) |
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predicting, explaining and controlling |
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The ______,______, and ______ of a speech code are inextricably woven into speaking itself. (proposition 6 of speech codes theory) |
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terms, rules and premises |
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Name six terms to describe the "communication" ritual |
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topic purpose participants act sequence setting norm of interaction |
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What is the definition of ethnography |
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the study and systematic recording of human culture |
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Four words for place used in Chapter 4 of Speaking Culturally |
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Corner Neighborhood Porch Street |
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For Teamsterville culture, when one's adressee is of higher stutus than oneself, male power assertion may properly employ connections with an _______who speaks for the person. |
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