12 Angry Men: Theoretical Analysis

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Theories Applied to 12 Angry Men When 12 men are trapped into a room for a debate is when the exact definition of a small group of communication is at a rise. The debate, furthermore, is about convicting a young boy, with his life ahead of him, for a murder. The little boy, in which, if found guilty would have a death sentence. The day would be much easier and the verdict would be quicker, if all the men looked at the surface evidence and put a vote in as guilty. The one man, however, changed the easy way out and plead the boy as not guilty. By this man saying not guilty upon the others made this scenario into a debate, which applies many theories upon communication in a small group. The dialectical theory is a group that is communicating and there is often competing tension that pull the conversation into multiple direction (Beeb and Masterson, 2015, p. 252). The dialectical theory applies to the 12 Angry Men because in this clip the 12 jury’s kept pulling back and forth aggressively. The men were all competing with one another and trying to prove the other ones wrong.
The verdict of guilty was easier to come by with the familiar surface evidence. The majority of the …show more content…

In which, with that in mind this applied to the functional theory. The catch, the functional theory is also a theory of communication to overcome constraints. While watching the clip, I noticed for some of the men to share their opinion was nearly impossible. The men who stood up to claim the verdict of the little boy was not guilty, got attacked with criticism from the other juries who had a different verdict. All the angry men had to function listening to the other angry men in order to come to their own conclusion. Even though throughout this clip it was hard for the angry men to keep an open mind to what others thought had happened, the whole process was a

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