英:[inˈkauntə ɡru:p]
美:[ɛnˈkaʊntɚ ɡrup]
英:[inˈkauntə ɡru:p]
美:[ɛnˈkaʊntɚ ɡrup]
交友小组,会心团体
noun
a usually unstructured group that seeks to develop the capacity of the individual to express feelings and to form emotional ties by unrestrained confrontation of individuals
The first known use of encounter group was in 1967
encounter groupnoun
a usually leaderless and unstructured group that seeks to develop the capacity of the individual to express feelings and to form emotional ties by unrestrained confrontation of individuals (as by physical contact, uninhibited verbalization, or nudity) compare t-group
1 In the late 1960s, Ms. Sher was divorced and broke, living in a welfare hotel in New York City with two young sons, working as a dishwasher during the day and as an encounter group leader at night.
2 And when a scene requires more people than the cast can summon by itself — say, an encounter group — the performers enlist front-row audience members to fill in.
3 The workshop involved participation in massages, therapy games, encounter groups, and meditations from 5:00 am until midnight.
4 Storr takes part in encounter groups in California, grills a Benedictine monk cloistered at Pluscarden Abbey in Scotland, and gets academic psychologists to chat frankly about their work.
5 During the civil rights era, reporters in the South frequently encountered groups of people who threatened to harm them.
6 In the encounter groups that took place here (and still do, in a different form, an experience to which Storr subjects himself), people were provoked, often harshly, into screaming at imaginary parents and usually ended up berating each other.
7 He was especially appalled by the amount of psychological and physical violence prevalent in Rajneesh encounter groups.
8 In a 1978 issue of the German magazine Stern, a woman named Eva Renzi recounted her experiences in a Rajneesh encounter group.