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    Hipster Culture Case Study

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    I. Summary In recent years, we have seen an increase in the people who adopt the hipster culture. The hipster culture is defined as rejecting anything and everything mainstream (Omar 2016). Many hipsters are known for listening to alternative indie music, shopping at thrift stores, being an active liberal protestor, etc. (Weeks 2011). Novelist Hal Niedzviecki realized that similar non-conformist activities and ideals that he himself believed in or partook in after some time became accepted and…

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    Laureta Stevenson Dr. Kyong Yoon CULT 101-001 Oct. 17th, 2016 Reinvention through Urbanization Nothing exists in a vacuum. You can’t invent something out of nothing, as can be applied to historical events. In two different articles, Inventing Opera as art in nineteenth-century Manchester and The Invention of the English Christmas, both written by John Storey, he explains a re-invention of a societal event (rather than the titles word of an invention). Both of the two subjects Storey is…

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    When I describe something as popular, I am describing something that appeals to and is liked by a large audience. A greatly example of this is a popular song; the song is constantly being played on the radio, many people request to have that song played, and the sales of the song are high. To be popular, the entity must be known and it must be liked by a large audience. In terms of live theatre, the measurements we can apply to gauge “popularity” encompass different mediums. As stated in the…

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    According to Oxford dictionary, pop culture is defined as “ Modern popular culture transmitted via the mass media and aimed particularly at younger people”. Pop culture cultivates individuals’ problem-solving facilities that allows the progression of their growth and intelligence. In the article, “Brain Candy,” Malcolm Gladwell analyzes Stevens Johnson's perspective towards popular culture and its effects on intelligence. Johnson introduces more ways of getting “smart” in “Everything Bad is good…

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    Malcolm Gladwell Trend

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    Trends: An Epidemic Every generation has its own memorable trend, such as leather jackets in the 50’s, leg warmers in the 80’s, and more recently, Silly Bands in the 2000’s. How did these trends come to be? In Malcolm Gladwell’s, The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference, the author explains that a trend is spread by essentially word-of-mouth until it reaches the pinnacle of its popularity, then eventually fading in prevalence. Not only this, but Gladwell likens trends to…

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    proliferation of multicultural values in reading material” (p.45) Robinson (2013) argues that Multicultural Literature helps a student to decode social, cultural, and political issues as well as begin to take a socially just perspective on other cultures. Further, multicultural education helps students to distinguish “pluristic values” (p.46) that help to decode challenging questions about cultural differences in positive…

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    How culture and ethnicity may affect a person's physical and psychological health? Nurses often work with diverse populations with complexity in health and psychosocial problems, assisting them to promote wellness, whether regarding their mental or physical states, their environments, or their social habits, lifestyles, and choices. Nurses need to examine ways their cultural background may influence nursing care when working with patients from different cultural and ethnic groups. The article of…

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    that directly translate into words or phrases consciously and purposely communicate the same meanings as the words for example the OK sign the thumbs up for “good job” and a V for “victory” but emblems are culture specific people must be careful when their culture’s emblems in other cultures Now this kinesics is used in this scene (were by the guy is telling the lady that they must…

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    Introduction Crime is a highly complex phenomenon that changes across both time and cultures. Activities that are legal in one country may be illegal in another country. As cultures change over time, behaviours that were once criminalised may not be criminalised anymore. Most people consider crime as deviant behaviour however not all crimes are deviant and not all deviant behaviour is criminal. Crime is the behaviour that breaks the formal laws of a given society. The punishment of crime will be…

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    Politeness is one of the preferred behaviors in the society. However, it can differ across cultures. Chiappini and Kádár (2011) suugested that “politeness is a common behavioral heritage of humanity, it is culturally as diverse as the human race. Politeness has been described as a cultural-specific phenomenon.” Just by searching on the dictionary…

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