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LEADER: 07264cam 2200589Ma 4500
001 ocm48979191
003 OCoLC
005 20211019004801.0
008 020206s2002 enkaf b 001 0 eng
040 $aUKM$beng$cUKM$dOCLCQ$dVPI$dYDXCP$dOCLCF$dBEDGE$dOCLCQ$dCAD$dNZABT$dNZAUC$dOCLCQ$dGDC$dYOU$dOCLCQ
015 $aGBA2Y8627$2bnb
019 $a1078058377$a1081048069
020 $a0099429780
020 $a9780099429784
035 $a(OCoLC)48979191$z(OCoLC)1078058377$z(OCoLC)1081048069
050 4 $aBF637.N66$bM677 2002
082 04 $a302.222$221
100 1 $aMorris, Desmond.
245 10 $aPeoplewatching /$cDesmond Morris.
246 14 $aPeople watching :$bthe Desmond Morris guide to body language
246 3 $aDesmond Morris guide to body language
260 $aLondon :$bVintage,$c2002.
300 $axvii, 526 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates :$billustrations ;$c20 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 491-507) and index.
505 0 $aIntroduction -- Actions. Inborn actions: Actions we do not have to learn; Discovered actions: Actions we discover for ourselves; Absorbed actions: Actions we acquire unknowingly from our companions; Trained actions: Actions we have to be taught; Mixed actions: Actions acquired in several ways -- Gestures. Incidental gestures: Mechanical actions, with secondary messages; Expressive gestures: Biological gestures of the kind we share with other animals; Mimic gestures: Gestures which transmit signals by imitation; Schematic gestures: Imitations that become abbreviated or abridged; Symbolic gestures: Gestures which represent moods and ideas; Technical gestures: Gestures used by specialist minorities; Coded gestures: Sign language based on a formal system.
505 0 $aGesture variants: Personal or local variations on gestural themes -- Multi-message gestures: Gestures that have many meanings -- Gesture alternatives: Different gestures that transmit the same signal -- Hybrid gestures: Signals made up of two original gestures -- Compound gestures: Gestures made up of a number of distinct elements -- Relic gestures: Gestures that have survived long after their primary contexts have vanished -- Regional signals: The way signals change from country to country and district to district -- Baton signals: actions that emphasize the rhythm of words -- Guide signs: Pointing and beckoning -- how we show the way -- Yes/No signals: Ways in which we signal agreement and acceptance, or denial and refusal -- Gaze behavior: Staring eyes and glancing eyes -- the way we look at one another -- Salutation displays: Hello and goodbye -- greetings and farewells -- Postural echo: The way friends unconsciously act in unison -- Tie-signs: Signals that display personal bonds to others.
505 0 $aBody-contact tie-signs: The way companions touch each other in public -- Auto-contact behaviour: Self-intimacies -- why and how we touch ourselves -- Non-verbal leakage: Clues that give us away without our knowing -- Contradictory signals: Giving two conflicting signals at the same time -- Shortfall signals: When we underreact despite ourselves -- Overkill signals: When we overreact -- Status displays: Ways in which we signal our position in the social peck order -- Territorial behaviour: The defence of a limited area -- Barrier signals: Body-defence actions in social situations -- Protective behaviour: Reactions to danger -- both real and imaginary -- Submissive behaviour: How we appease our critics or attackers -- Religious displays: Actions performed to placate imagined deities -- Altruistic behaviour: How do we help others at our own expense? -- Fighting behaviour: Pulling punches and throwing punches -- the biology of human combat -- Triumph displays: How winners celebrate and losers react.
505 0 $aCut-off: Actions that block incoming visual signals when we under stress -- Autonomic signals: Actions and other changes resulting from body-stress -- Pupil signals: Pupil dilations and constrictions indicating changes of mood -- Intention movements: Get-ready actions that signal future intentions -- Displacement activities: Agitated fill-in actions performed during periods of acute tension -- Redirected activities: Actions diverted on to a bystander -- Re-motivating activities: Actions which stimulate a new mood as a way of eliminating an old one -- Insult signals: Sneers and snubs -- the ways we show disrespect and contempt -- Threat signals: Attempts to intimidate without coming to blows -- Obscene signals: The symbolism of sexual insults -- Taboo zones: Regions of the human body that are out of bounds -- Overexposed signals: Going too far -- breaking through the etiquette barrier -- Clothing signals: Clothing as display, comfort and modesty -- Body adornment: Social mutilations and cosmetic decorations.
505 0 $aGender signals: Masculine and feminine signals that help to label or emphasize the sex of the signaller -- Body self-mimicry: Ways in which we imitate ourselves anatomically -- Sexual signals: The courtship and pre-copulatory sequence of the human animal -- Parental signals: Maternal and paternal messages of loving care and safety -- Infantile signals: The babyface syndrome, and the signals of crying, smiling and laughing -- Animal contacts: From predator to pets: human involvement with other species -- Play patterns: Play signals, play rules and playfulness -- Meta-signals: How one signal can tell us about the nature of other signals -- Supernormal stimuli: The creation of stimuli stronger than their natural equivalents -- Aesthetic behaviour: Our reactions to the beautiful in nature and in art -- Laterality: Left-handed versus right-handed -- Locomotion: The twenty basic ways of moving from place to place -- Aquatic behaviours: Was the human species more aquatic in the ancient past? -- Feeding behaviour: How and where and what we drink and eat -- Sporting behaviour: The biology of sport -- a modern hunting ritual -- Resting behaviour: The postures of relaxation and the nature of sleeping and dreaming -- Age: The human lifespan and how we prolong it -- The future: What lies in store for the human species.
520 $aThis is the culmination of a career of watching people - their behaviour and habits, their personalities and their quirks. Morris shows us how people, consciously and unconsciously, signal their attitudes, desires and innermost feelings with their bodies and actions.
650 0 $aBody language.
650 7 $aRelations humaines.$2eclas
650 7 $aPsychologie.$2eclas
650 7 $aCommunication.$2eclas
650 7 $aBody language.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00835365
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