Media
Community
Public Advocacy
Intersectionality/
Reflexivity
Intercultural
100
This term describes the systematic monitoring of individuals for the purpose of maintaining power structures.
What is surveillance?
100
This phrase describes the adjustment of communication methods based on who is listening.
What is audience awareness?
100
This term describes the framework for public advocacy wherein the speaker outlines an issue first in order to offer methods of resolving it.
What is problem-posing method?
100
This term describes unearned benefits which are granted via membership in an identity category.
What is privilege?
100
This is the false assumption that things will remain the same as time progresses.
What is the myth that culture is static?
200
This term describes how individuals recognize themselves as part of a culture, through the call & response we experience communicating within culture(s).
What is interpellation
200
This term means to engage with others in an effort to promote lasting, meaningful change.
What is advocate?
200
This phrase describes the process of allowing the experiences of others to guide how we engage in our politics.
What is listening as advocacy.
200
This word implies a back-and-forth process of thinking about how we act, why we act, what that action means, who it enables, and who it hurts.
What is reflexivity?
200
This is the assumption that something is not a problem because it does not personally affect the person listening.
What is the myth that we're making a big deal out of nothing.
300
'Strategy' describes how people in power maintain power, but this word describes individual actions which subvert the power structure.
What is tactics?
300
This term describes a method of listening wherein the listener focuses on understanding the position of the speaker and reflecting on their own relationship to the described situation.
What is compassionate critical listening?
300
This term describes the back-and-forth method of communicating where both (or all) parties are heard and discussions focus on responding to one another.
What is dialogic communication.
300
This method of understanding involves identifying problems in a given situation, and maintaining an ethic of hope and possibility for change.
What is critical thinking?
300
This theory contends that we occupy relationships to one another within systems of power and those relationships are mediated by social, political, and economic power.
What is standpoint theory?
400
Fiske described this term in the context of media-making by individuals, that these media productions push back against stereotypes and dominant messages in society.
What is resistance?
400
This is the structure in which communication is used to create connections and bridge differences.
What is culture?
400
This term is defined as "reflection and action on the world in order to transform it."
What is praxis?
400
This term describes the process by which individuals are disciplined to the point that they operate as required by those in power.
What are docile bodies?
400
These are easy conclusions about people that reduce them from unique individuals to predictable types.
What are stereotypes?
500
The author of Discipline & Punish, who outlined how individual action is largely determined by constructs put into place by hegemonic members of society.
Who is Michel Foucault?
500
Your community is one of the factors, along with race, class, gender and others, by which one identifies their place in society.
What is social location?
500
This author wrote Pedagogy of the Oppressed, the first work to argue that teaching must also offer students the ability to advocate for themselves and their communities
Who is Paulo Freire?
500
This phrase describes both how bodies are read by others as well as how one constructs themselves through repeated actions.
What is the body-identity connection?
500
This is a metaphor for those who occupy positions of power in society and who shape society to match their experience.
What is the mythical norm?
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