Culture Shock Essay

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    Name: Candice Wu Title: “Three Stages of Culture Shock” Specific Rhetorical Purpose: To inform my audience about the three stages of culture shock and some tips of how to adjust and accept the different culture. Thesis: A better understanding of what culture shock is can help people to get over culture shock easily. Introduction Attention-getter: In Bulgabia, nodding left and right means yes, nodding up and down means no; In Sweden, people use folk and knife to eat their burgers; In Germany, people

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    In “Even Anthropologists Get Culture Shock” by Conrad Kottak p. 103, he talks about the culture shock he received during his first field experience as an anthropologist student in another country. The thesis of the article is Conrad’s first visit to Arembepe, Brazil and the culture shock he went through. The thesis is stated. “Brought up in one culture, intensely curious about others, anthropologist nevertheless experience culture shock, particularly on their first field trip.” I do feel that Conrad’s

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    Culture shock stereotypes I feel that coming to Japan helped break a lot of assumptions about Japanese culture and also confirm knowledge I knew only from textbooks. The trip also made me experience some culture shock but if anything it made the trip more interesting. I appreciated the irony that was ever present. There were many customs both old and new I appreciated on the trip and helped open my eyes to new experiences, observations, and interactions with people I normally would never have

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    What is Culture Shock? 1.) Honeymoon Stage Upon arrival at a faraway country, jetlag clouds over while unfamiliar faces bustle by. Unique smells and bouncy music that you’ve never experienced before pulse through your ecstatic brain as you search for a bite to eat. Everything is new and exciting. Even the spoken language sounds like birds singing, not people conversing! The first peak at your new home – a quaint apartment overlooking the outskirt streets of Rome, makes your heart dance. Your

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    What Peter Berger means by the first statement, in which he links sociological discovery to culture shock minus geographical displacement, is that sociological discoveries and realizations are very often made in one 's own society. When they are made, they might come off as shocking because they are being viewed in a different light. You can go to the nearest church or park and make new discoveries with what you observe in an open state of mind. Sociological discoveries could too make one feel uncomfortable

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    Toxic Shock Syndrome is a rare, potentially life-threatening, syndrome that was initially discovered and diagnosed in the 1970s. “It is characterized by high fever, rash, hypotension, multi organ failure (involving at least 3 or more organ systems), and desquamation of the skin, typically of the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, 1-2 weeks after the onset of acute illness. The clinical syndrome can also include severe myalgia, vomiting, diarrhea, headache, and nonfocal neurologic abnormalities

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    It’s a pleasant Sunday afternoon, you’re enjoying a cup of coffee at your favorite little shop. Suddenly panic takes over the room, cops rush in telling everyone to evacuate immediately. Apparently, they have been tipped of that there is a bomb planted below this coffee shop. Now, they have the suspect in custody. He says there is more, and they could go off at any time. The police cannot get them to talk. Simply asking is getting them nowhere. Would you use torture to get this vital information

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    Case Study Janet Jackson

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    Throughout the following essay the in-depth evaluation of the patient Janet Jackson will occur. This evaluation will include the presenting conditions pathophysiology and aetiology. Whilst looking at the deterioration post operatively, again assessing the pathophysiology and nursing management that will be undertaken regarding the new patient condition. It will then be suggested that an interdisciplinary approach be taken to the patients care and justification of this method and referral to other

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    Symbolism In The Lottery

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    in terms of the scapegoat traditions of anthropology and literature, pointing out its obvious comment on the innate savagery of man lurking beneath his civilized trappings. Most acknowledge the power of the story, admitting that the psychological shock of the ritual murder in an atmosphere of modern, small-town normality cannot be easily forgotten. Nevertheless, beneath the praise of these critics frequently runs a current of uneasiness, a sense of having been defrauded in some way by the development

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    American Directness and the Japanese American and Japanese ways of speaking are so different that they often cause culture shock to both Americans and Japanese who visit each other's country. Most Japanese who come to the United States are at first shocked and have a problem with the American direct way of speaking. Culture shock occurs because most Japanese cannot easily escape from the formula "politeness= indirectness." Compared to the American way of speaking, Japanese speak much more indirectly

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