“Fist year English” (module: “Seeing and saying things in English”).
Anita,
Horn Group:
N 26/10/08
Task
1 (Part 2)
E)
1.
The German student gets upset because the
stereotypes described by the young British boy seem to fit perfectly
his personality.
2.
Most people
don’t like to be put in front of the obvious truth about them
because it’s hurtful. The German student can’t deny the
truth: he’s studying and he’s tidy and those are
characteristics he might not like about himself. Maybe he suffers
about being too orderly and dutiful and wishes he enjoyed life more.
3.
On the other
hand the British boy isn’t teasing him for his personal
character, but for stereotypes and generalizations about people from
his country, in this case Germany. The British boy doesn’t
really know the German boy, and what he said might easily apply to
someone who isn’t German. The German student gets really upset
when the stereotypes are applied to German history, to what happened
in World War 2, and to Hitler in particular, and that is very
upsetting because probably the German boy is aware of the burden his
country, and himself as a German, is carrying to those events and
ashamed for those terrible events. The British boy shows a huge lack
of sensibility and a very simple mind.
4.
I think
stereotypes on one hand do describe the values of a culture. For
example it’s true that Italians are generally untidy and
Germans aren’t, and this fact applies in good and bad to
personal and public life is these two countries.
5.
But on the
other hand stereotypes are misleading because whatever countries we
are from we are all individuals with different characters and values,
and the stereotypes don’t apply to everyone. Also stereotypes
differ from country to country, meaning that the stereotypes that
British people have about Germans might be different from the ones
that Italians, for example, have about them. So stereotypes don’t
only tell us something about the culture they describe, but about
those who use them. Also, values are personal and are determined by
many other facts, like family history, religion, schooling, social
position…ex. Another deceptive thing about stereotypes is that
they generate other stereotypes. Let’s take the example about
Germans and Italians about being tidy. Being neat is generally
associated with being cold, not very sensitive and not at all
creative; being untidy is associated with being in some way creative,
not reliable and unqualified. But Germans have some of the best
philosophy, that definitely requires putting thought in order, but
also being sensitive and Italians have great architecture witch needs
creative qualities but also very mathematical and orderly thinking.
So eventually I would say stereotypes are very ambiguous.
F)
Attitudes:
positive thinking
very clear setting of goals for the future
strong nationalistic values, strong ideas about their democracy
strong idea of private property and idea of self-defence with any means necessary
strong work ethic. idea that if you want something badly you will eventually achieve it by working hard.
strong competitiveness (concept of looser versus popular)
Questions:
Are you happy of your life in general? (1-10)
Have you decided which career to undertake in the future? (y/n)
What do you think is the most important quality to have to accomplish what you want in life?
How proud are you of being American? (1-10)
Do you think America is a democratic country?
Do you or don’t you agree with the following statement “If someone was to enter my private property and I had a fire arm I would use it”?
What do you think about someone who hasn’t accomplished what they want in life?
What was the most important fact that divided peers in school?
Probable answers and why:
From
6 to 10. I think this is a great quality about Americans, although
they have problems like everybody else, they always seem to look at
the positive side of life.
Yes.
Maybe it’s because of schooling system, but young Americans
usually seem to be very determined and to have already decided what
their path for the future is going to be.
Strong
will/Woking hard. Americans generally think that anything is
possible if you want it very badly, and if you work hard for it
(historical idea that the US the world where everything is possible,
the self-made man concept).
From
7 to 10.
Yes.
They think America is the only truly democratic country in the
world, even thought history has proved them wrong. This is because
the people who “made” America were escaping from less
democratic European countries and based their constitution on the
idea of freedom, equality and democracy, and this is what Americans
have always been taught.
Yes.
In the states owning personal firearms is legal, and I think this
shows that although Americans seem vey open, they’re actually
very frightened, and it shows is their idea of terrorism and
“defensive war”.
Looser.
Idea that you don’t have anything if you didn’t achieve
what you wanted. Looser means that you’re not worth
anything.
Language habits or attitudes that I attribute to young American people |
Questions |
Possible answers |
Positive thinking |
1) Are you happy about your life in general? (1-10) |
From 6 to 10 |
Very clear setting of goals for the future |
2) Have you decided which career to undertake in the future? (y/n) |
yes |
Precise idea of private property and idea of self-defence with any means necessary |
6) Do you or don’t you agree with the following statement “If someone was to enter in my private property and I had a fire arm I would use it”? |
yes |
Nationalistic values, ideas about their democracy |
4) How proud are you of being American? (1-10) 5) Do you think America is a democratic country? |
From 7 to 10 yes |
Work ethic. idea that if you want something badly you we eventually achieve it by working hard |
3) What do you think is the most important quality to have to accomplish what you want in life? 7) What do you think about someone who hasn’t accomplished what they want in life? |
Strong will/Working hard Looser |
Competitiveness (concept of looser versus popular) |
8) What was the most important fact that divided peers in school? |
Competitions in sports/ being looser versus popular |
8.
Competitions in sports/ being looser versus popular. Establishing
the value of a person on how well he does in sports and how he’s
liked by others.