Social Constructionism In Action: show how social constructionist theories in general or a related theory/concept

. Your poster will present the argument in a
recent social science journal article (‘recent’ is defined here as something published since 2000). This article should show how social constructionist theories in general or a related theory/concept (such as hegemonic masculinity for example) can throw some critical light on a social inequality, injustice or the creation of difference. In other words, your work will use recent research to show the theory/concept approach in action.

This exercise means that you have to
1. Select a recent journal article suitable for your needs
2. identify the core argument in this article
3. present that argument in poster form to a wide audience
We expect that you will identify the argument that the article makes and be able to present it with precision and clarity.

You will need to give some thought to your choice and to the ways you present it.

CITATIONS AND REFERENCING AN IMAGE.

When selecting images to include in your poster, try to use images which clearly provide information about reuse and copyright permissions.

You can find open source images at: https://pixabay.com

You can find images with licenses which allow reuse using the Creative Commons search tool: https://search.creativecommons.org

You may also find the library’s libguide on Images helpful: https://libguides.brighton.ac.uk/images

Referencing images in Harvard

To reference an image in Harvard you need to obtain the following information about the image in the order specified.

1. (Optional) you can use figure numbers to identify the pictures/illustrations in the reference section of your poster.

2. Creator’s surname, then initials. If this information is unknown then you can start with the title as per step 4.

3. Year of creation (in brackets) if not known then you can include n.d. (no date) in the brackets

4. Title of image (in italics)

5. Medium [in square brackets] e.g. this is the original format:
[photograph] = a photograph from Flickr for example
[poster] = a image of something which was originally a poster
[image online] = an image of something like an infographic which does not fit any existing definition and would generally exist on the web. A meme would also fit into this example.

6. At URL e.g. the main page where this image can be accessed as opposed to the direct link to the image

7. Accessed on [in square brackets] the date you accessed the image in the month e.g. [Accessed 05 January 2015].

NOTE: The poster should be done on powerpoint and present all the arguments on ONE slide.

Use the order calculator below and get started! Contact our live support team for any assistance or inquiry.

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