School of Singaporean stereotypes
We are surrounded by stereotypes. I stereotype others, and others stereotype me, and we all, at the same time, stereotype ourselves. It is an inevitable social habit that we acquire through many different ways and in different stages of our lives. Stereotyping is considered to b...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-528672019-12-10T11:23:56Z School of Singaporean stereotypes Yang, Ge Astrid Al Mkhlaafy School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Visual arts We are surrounded by stereotypes. I stereotype others, and others stereotype me, and we all, at the same time, stereotype ourselves. It is an inevitable social habit that we acquire through many different ways and in different stages of our lives. Stereotyping is considered to be a cognitive step people take to learn about others, communicate and make sense of situations, especially those that they are less familiar with. People categorize those they meet or see through a process of deconstruction and decoding, reading the people around them through the way others dress, behave, the language they use and even the environment they are in. There is always this tension going on: stereotypes relate to prejudice and even discrimination. As such, it instantly connotes negativity. Yet it is something so common and so natural that we often do not even realize that we are stereotyping. It is such a sensitive topic yet at the same time we are usually so casual about it, at least in the local context that we are in. I feel that there is so much room to explore into this topic that is most of the time feared and at the same time, taken for granted. Bachelor of Fine Arts 2013-05-28T08:49:00Z 2013-05-28T08:49:00Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52867 en Nanyang Technological University 27 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Visual arts Yang, Ge School of Singaporean stereotypes |
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We are surrounded by stereotypes. I stereotype others, and others stereotype me, and
we all, at the same time, stereotype ourselves. It is an inevitable social habit that we
acquire through many different ways and in different stages of our lives. Stereotyping is
considered to be a cognitive step people take to learn about others, communicate and
make sense of situations, especially those that they are less familiar with. People
categorize those they meet or see through a process of deconstruction and decoding,
reading the people around them through the way others dress, behave, the language they
use and even the environment they are in.
There is always this tension going on: stereotypes relate to prejudice and even
discrimination. As such, it instantly connotes negativity. Yet it is something so common
and so natural that we often do not even realize that we are stereotyping. It is such a
sensitive topic yet at the same time we are usually so casual about it, at least in the local
context that we are in. I feel that there is so much room to explore into this topic that is
most of the time feared and at the same time, taken for granted. |
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Astrid Al Mkhlaafy |
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Astrid Al Mkhlaafy Yang, Ge |
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Final Year Project |
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Yang, Ge |
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Yang, Ge |
title |
School of Singaporean stereotypes |
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School of Singaporean stereotypes |
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School of Singaporean stereotypes |
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School of Singaporean stereotypes |
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School of Singaporean stereotypes |
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school of singaporean stereotypes |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52867 |
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1681045350410878976 |