User:Mxrwho/The Final Project/Bibliography: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
Stress as a novelty factor in the creation of metaphor. | Stress as a novelty factor in the creation of metaphor. | ||
[https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20210408-the-sexist-words-that-are-harmful-to-women Galer: The languages with built-in sexism] | |||
How language affects the way we perceive the world (and gender), with examples from different languages. |
Revision as of 02:05, 3 November 2024
Institutional labeling and the fluidity of diagnoses.
Moncrieffe & Eyben (ed.): The Power of Labelling: How People are Categorized and Why it Matters
How labelling works and how it affects the behavior of the ones labelled.
Cooley: Human Nature and the Social Order
The dynamics of society and the concept of the "looking-glass self" or how the individual internalizes other people's views (true or preceived) and behaves accordingly.
Fellows: Making Up a Mimic: Interacting with Echoes in the Age of AI
Labeling in the age of AI, its categorizing power and our reduced resistance.
Tornborg: Repetition in Transmediation
Repetition in different media and how it enriches the message.
Dusi: Remaking as a Practice: Some Problems of Transmediality
Repetition as remaking. Its narrative value.
Adaptation as a familiar home that can be re-inhabited. The importance of conciseness.
Hassan & Barber: The effects of repetition frequency on the illusory truth effect
How repetition affects beliefs of truth.
A phenomenologist approach on language as a contextually situated and experientially grounded semiotic system.
Stress as a novelty factor in the creation of metaphor.
Galer: The languages with built-in sexism
How language affects the way we perceive the world (and gender), with examples from different languages.