Post on 14-Dec-2015
transcript
APA Tip of the Day: Quotations of 40 or more words
Include direct quotations from your primary text only as absolutely needed. Use the minimal amount of text as necessary. When using a quotation of 40 or more words, you must use a special format:Block indent the quoteDo not use quotation marks.Include the citation after the final punctuation mark, unless you are putting it just before the quotation starts.
Example:
In describing the first author’s response to educational inequities in the basis of race/ethnicity, SES, and language minority status, de Valenzuela, Green and Hall (2010) wrote that:In considering appropriate educational responses to these inequities, I follow Nieto’s (1996) distinction between equality of educational opportunities and educational equity…. My work in Bilingual Special Education is directly related to this paradigm and underscored by my desire to improve educational access for all students in way that equalizes power relations and recasts student differences as normal and welcome in my classroom. (p. 192)With this statement, the authors explicitly linked Universal Design to educational equity.
Announcements: Film review essay due next week. Each group will have 20-25 minutes in which
to informally summarize and discuss their analyses.
Read the assignment description in the syllabus VERY carefully.
Use section headers. Follow the directions on UNM Learn for
uploading your paper.
Whole group analysis and discussion of "There's Something
about Mary"
Who has a particular scene they would like to discuss?
Quick Write: To what extent do you
think that how people (with and without disability) are portrayed in the media matters? Why?
To deconstruct how disability is used in ‘There’s Something About Mary’ to portray the main characters as ideal romantic partners.
Ted +
Mary
Why “Mary”? Extremely popular film.
Images of disability are woven throughout.
An exaggerated presence of disability, far beyond natural occurrence.
Multiple interactions between characters with and without disabilities.
(Biklen & Bogdan, 1977, as cited in Bogdan & Knoll, 1995)
Handicapist Stereotypes:
1. pitiable and pathetic
2. an object of violence
3. sinister or evil
4. atmosphere
5. “Super Crip”
6. Laughable
7. his/her own worst enemy
8. a burden
9. either nonsexual or sex-starved or degenerate
10.incapable of fully participating in everyday life.
(Biklen & Bogdan, 1977, as cited in Bogdan & Knoll, 1995)
Handicapist Stereotypes:
1. pitiable and pathetic
2. an object of violence
3. sinister or evil
4. atmosphere
5. “Super Crip”
6. Laughable
7. his/her own worst enemy
8. a burden
9. either nonsexual or sex-starved or degenerate
10.incapable of fully participating in everyday life.
“Thematic analysis, first and foremost, is about searching for patterns in data.” (Shank, 2002, p. 129)
In “Mary”, people with disabilities are portrayed as powerless and low status “others” who are: Childlike
Needy Less than human Less than full participants Victims Violent and dangerous
Thematic analysis, cont.:
Socially inappropriate
Damaged goods: revealed through visible signs emotionally fragile
Members of a special category - different rules apply to them
Not legitimate romantic partners
We suggest that Warren provides that something. Without his assistance, Mary loses the warm, sensitive, and nurturing qualities that construct her as the romantic ideal.
Disability is used as the means to construct Ted and Mary as romantic ideals. The main characters profit from the presence of disability in their lives,
all the while under the guise of altruistic charitable actions.