Abstract

This paper represents the methodological procedure of diagnosing behavioural stereotypes resilience of different language cultures representatives. The methodological procedure is aimed at compiling a typology of narrative codes of stereotypes resilience of four language cultures representatives and it involves the implementation of six successive stages that will help: 1) to compile a list of personal characteristics of respondents involved in the survey; 2) to compile stimulus lists, i.e. markers of expressive narratives (by keywords); 3) to enter the compiled stimuli lists into the Google Forms with corresponding guidelines for respondents; 4) to perform a free associative experiment with the British, French, Germans and Ukrainians of different social groups through electronic communication; 5) to do the computer processing of the obtained results with the involvement of the information-analytical service STIMULUS; 6) to differentiate the degree of stereotypes resilience of separate social groups of each studied linguoculture in situations of expressive narratives, and differentiate linguistic cultures according to three types of their resilience and their degrees of adaptation to stressful phenomena.

Highlights

  • The recent progressive trends of modern worldwide life, such as globalization, multiculturalism, accelerated pace of total informatisation, etc. have changed these priorities due to the spread of coronavirus disease in the world and its danger to human health

  • Lippmann (2011), the American sociologist, in the beginning of the XXth century called these learned and stable patterns of behaviour stereotypes and even assumed that this phenomenon is door to bias and sometimes has nothing to do with reality, but is resilient as scientific and social construct

  • Lippmann (2011), the American sociologist, called learned and stable patterns of behaviour stereotypes and assumed that this phenomenon is door to bias and sometimes has nothing to do with reality (Lippmann, 2011), but is resilient as a scientific and social construct

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Summary

Introduction

The recent progressive trends of modern worldwide life, such as globalization, multiculturalism, accelerated pace of total informatisation, etc. have changed these priorities due to the spread of coronavirus disease in the world and its danger to human health. The outlined issues have acquired hot topicality and aroused enthusiastic debates about the design of a proficitarian approach to the analysis of the human psychotraumatic syndrome overcoming technique and the search for new stereotypical patterns of behaviour after having experienced it. It is the stereotypes which are the most resilient phenomena that root in human consciousness and form its protective functions (resilient – able to return quickly to a previous good condition after problems; viability (Maddi, Harvey & Khoshaba, 2009), passion (Gumilev, 2008), viability and stamina (Ananiyev, 2001), personal adaptive potential (Maklakov, 2001), personal potential (Leontiyev, 2006), etc.)

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