Anti-Semitism, in the broad sense of the term, refers to hostility towards Jews based on a combination of religious, racial, cultural and ethnic prejudices. [1] In a narrow sense, anti-Semitism refers to hostility towards Jews. Jews, defined as a race, not as a religious group, a modern conception that would have emerged in the mid-nineteenth century as a derivation of racism and nationalism, thus differentiating itself from the earlier "religious anti-Semitism" that some historians prefer to call anti-Judaism, [2] Whose most developed expression would be Christian anti-Judaism.
Anti-Semitism can manifest itself in many forms, such as individual hatred or discrimination, attacks by nucleated groups for that purpose, or even police or state violence.
Answer:
A. Increase awareness of the differences in discourse conventions across different groups
Explanation:
According to the Gumperz reading and the video ‘Crosstalk’, the best way to address cross-cultural miscommunication is to <em>increase awareness of the differences in discourse conventions across different groups. </em>Gumpertz was a linguist who studied socio-linguistic and called it ethnography of communication. He studied the variation of discourse in different speech communities. The culture of the interlocutors affected both the discourse and meaning.
In journalism, yellow journalism is a pejorative reference given to various practices or tendencies of news media organizations which, by the standards of journalistic professionalism, are considered to be unprofessional and detrimental to the principles of journalistic integrity as a whole. The term typically refers to sensationalism in news reporting that bears only a superficial resemblance to the profession of journalism. The term "infotainment" was coined to refer to news programming that blends journalism and entertainment in a way which, critics argue, diminishes the news value and professionalism of the reporting.
The phrase "media bias" is a related term which is used in political rhetoric to assert a broad political bias within news media organizations. Its common usage derives from news media talk shows where an organization's functionaries and personalities tend to direct discussion away from issues in professional journalism to issues in politics.
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Are there any multiple choice answers??? Or like... is it just from the text or??