Crosscult Recap
LECTURE
ONE
Cross-cultural
communication
= The influence of cultural variability and diversity on interpersonally
oriented communication outcomes.
International
communication
= Communication between governments or nations.
Intracultural
communication
= Communication between members of the same culture.
Intercultural business
communication
= Interpersonal communication within/between businesses that involve people
from more than one culture.
Diffusion= Process by which the 2
cultures learn/adapt materials and adopt practices from each other.
Globalisation = The capability of a
corporation to take a product and market it in the entire civilised world.
World culture = Concept where
traditional barriers break down and there is a commonality of human needs.
Melting pot = Sociocultural
assimilation of people of differing backgrounds/nationalities.
Salad bowl = Neighbourhoods of
people with a common heritage who strive to retain their original culture and
language.
PCD = Perceived Cultural
Differences (Implication that we assess others internally according to a scale
of similarity/dissimilarity, in a process called social categorisation.)
Why we study Crosscult
1.
Technological
Imperative
-
Global
village, communication technology
-
Increase
in info and communication opportunities
2.
Demographic Imperative
-
Increasing
diversity in populations
-
Changing
demographics in the working world
3.
Economic Imperative
-
Globalisation
and world markets
-
The
need to remain competitive in the global market
4.
Peace Imperative
-
The
need for harmony in the world
5.
Self-Awareness
Imperative
-
Understanding
our own cultural identity
6.
Ethical Imperative
-
Relativity
(no cultural pattern that’s inherently right/wrong) vs Universality (most
cultures would deem this right/wrong)
-
Cultural
values and ethical judgements
Benefits from studying
Crosscult
1. Personal empowerment
2. Freedom from ignorance
3. Productive
relationships
LECTURE
TWO
PCDs
ü
Motivate
us to adjust/accommodate our behaviour/thoughts to manage the uncertainty and
anxiety in an intercultural encounter. (Intercultural communication is more
effective)
û
Lead
to reinforcement of stereotypes, bigotry, withdrawal and intolerance. (Negative
effects of social categorisation)
Model of Intercultural
Communication
-
PCDs
between Persons A and B lead to uncertainty and anxiety in an intercultural
encounter.
-
If
PCDs motivate accommodation and adaptation, this leads to a new culture C.
-
Culture
C provides a common ground for Persons A and B.
Note:
For Culture C to be successful, positive responses to the ABC principles are
important.
The
ABC Principle:
Affective (positive
feeling)
Behavioural (actions
and skills, verbal/nonverbal communication)
Cognitive (beliefs and
expectations)
Culture = The holistic
interrelationship of a group’s identity, beliefs, values, activities, rules,
customs, communication patterns and institutions.
Communication
= The
transfer of meaningful information.
Features of
Communication
-
Symbolism
(we assume that others share our symbol system when we use symbols)
-
Each
message can have more than one meaning
-
Dynamism
(ongoing process, relies on other communication events to make sense)
Culture teaches…
1.
Significant
rules, rituals and procedures (socialisation)
2.
Values
through communication (reinforcement)
3.
Relationships
with others (dynamics of roles and expectations in interpersonal settings)
The Inner Core of
Culture
1.
History
-
Transmitted
from generation to generation
-
Guides
members into the future
2.
Identity
-
Group
personality
-
From
a sense of social identity, one receives a sense of personal identity
3.
Cultural Beliefs
-
Interpretation
of reality (perceptual window through which they see themselves and others)
Beliefs = culture’s view of what is true/false
Values
= determine how people ought to behave
World
view = what a culture believes about nature and the workings of the cosmos
Cultural Activities
1.
Technology and
Material Culture
-
Food/clothing/travel
methods/tools etc.
-
Most
visible to tourists
2.
Cultural Roles
-
Categories
of people and their expected pattern of performance
3.
Artistic Expression
-
Music/sculpture/paintings/weaving
as reflections of underlying themes of a culture at a given time in its history
4.
Language and Culture
-
Language
and/or set of interactional rules for conversation
-
Also
includes the use of codes/slang/jargon that are only understood by fellow
members of the same culture
5.
Rules and Customs (and
Rituals)
Rules
= regulations and expectations guiding the conduct about how things are to be
accomplished.
Customs = procedures and operational habits within a
culture.
Rituals
= activities customarily followed in a culture conditioned by the standards and
rules of that culture.
Institutions Within A
Culture
1.
Economic Institutions
-
Various
mechanisms of dealing with economics and work
-
Most
dominant one is the monetary economy system
2.
Kinship Systems
(Family As Institutions)
-
Polygamy/monogamy/nuclear
vs extended family
3.
Political Institutions
-
Governing
organisation functioning on both a formal and informal level
4.
Health Institutions
-
How
a culture addresses the health of cultural members
5.
Educational
Institutions
-
Recognising
diversity in educational subsystems and how those differnces alter our
perceptions and messages
6.
Religious Institutions
-
Involving
beliefs/ceremonies/places of worship/norms of respect/linguistic concepts
surrounding worship and spiritual issues
Histories
·
Political/Intellectual/Social
·
Family
·
National
·
Cultural-group
Individualism = valuing ourselves
as separate individuals (self-interest)
Collectivism = emphasis on common
interest, conformity, cooperation and interdependence
LECTURE
THREE
Identity = Self-concept (a
bridge between culture and communication)
Conflicts
may arise when there are sharp differences between who we think we are and who others
think we are.
1.
Social Science (identity related to
groups)
2.
Interpretive (identity formed
through communication with others)
3.
Critical (identity shaped
through social and historical forces/concepts)
Minority Identity
1.
Unexamined Identity (lack of exploration
of identity because of disinterest or acceptance)
2.
Conformity (internalisation of
values and norms of dominant group + strong desire to assimilate)
3.
Resistance and
Separation
(growing awareness, distance, the need to assert identity)
4.
Integration (ideal outcome –
strong sense of identity formed but with appreciation of other groups)
Majority Identity
1.
Unexamined Identity (lack of exploration
of identity because of disinterest or acceptance)
2.
Acceptance (social hierarchy
seen as “normal” for dominant group, minority tends to be viewed as unduly
sensitive)
3.
Resistance (major paradigm shift
– dominant group blames itself as source of problems for the minority, sense of
shame for some in the dominant group)
4.
Redefinition (redefining identity
to recognise privileges while working to eliminate inequalities)
5.
Integration (ideal outcome –
increased consciousness and appreciation of other groups)
Social and Cultural
Identities
1.
Gender
-
Not
the same as biological sex
-
What
it means to be a man/woman is heavily influenced by cultural notions
2.
Age
-
Cultural
notions of how people of certain ages should look, act and behave
3.
Racial
-
Based
to some extent on physical characteristics, but also constricted in fluid
social contexts
4.
Ethnic
-
Set
of ideas about one’s ethnic group membership
-
Self-identification,
knowledge about the ethnic group, feelings about belonging to a particular
group
-
Shared
sense of history and origin
5.
Religious
-
Sense
of belonging to a religious group
-
Often
confused with racial/ethnic identity
-
Conflicts
arise when the religious beliefs of one group are imposed on others who may not
share the same beliefs
6.
Class
-
Sense
of belonging to a group with a shared economic/occupational/social status
7.
National
-
One’s
legal status in relation to a nation
-
For
some, they feel their ethnic identity more strongly than national identity
8.
Regional
-
Many
regions have separate but vital and important cultural identities
9.
Personal
-
We
are who we think we are, and contextual and outside forces constrain and
influence our self-perception too
Microculture = groups we choose to
associate with/collective identities we prefer to maintain/demographics we may
represent/ethnic and family origins we may experience based on birth
Rural Culture = emphasise personal
know-how, practicality and simplicity over complexity in approaching decisions
Poverty Culture = lack of financial
and material resources
Countercultural
Microcultures
= groups that stand in opposition or perform resistantly towards the larger
culture
Organisational Culture = microcultures of
social identification (also includes work cultures)
LECTURE
FOUR
Sociolinguistics = effects of social
and cultural differences upon a language
Semantics = the study of
meaning
Syntactic = the study of the
structure (grammar) of a language
Pragmatics = the study of how
meaning is constructed in relation to receivers (how language is used in
particular contexts)
Phonetics = the study of the
sound system of language
High-Context
Communication
-
1
word can mean 10 words
-
Most
of the information is either in the physical context or internalised in the
person, while very little is in the coded, explicit part of the message
-
Emphasis
is on understanding messages without direct verbal communication
-
Members
are EXPECTED to know how to perform, so information and cultural rules remain
implicit
Low-Context
Communication
-
10
words can mean 1 word
-
Majority
of meaning and information in verbal code
-
Emphasis
on explicit verbal messages
-
Procedures
are explained and expectations are discussed
Low-Context Cultures
-
Encourage
communicators to separate the issue from the person
-
People
do not like things they do not understand
-
Very
direct style of communication
-
Seek
interpersonal data emphasising personal, individual aspects, not social or
group aspects
Translation = the process of
producing a written text that refers to something said/written in another
language
Interpretation = the process of
verbally expressing what is said/written in another language
Translation Problems
-
Equivalency
and accuracy (some languages have tremendous flexibility in expression, whereas
others have a limited range of words)
-
For
linguists, the focus is on comparing the translated meaning to the original
meaning
-
For
intercultural communication process, the focus is on the bridges that people
construct to cross from one language to another
-
Vocabulary
equivalence
-
Parable
and proverbs
-
Conversation
taboos
Code-switching = the phenomenon of
changing languages, dialects or even accents
Nonverbal
Communication
= what is not spoken (facial expression, eye contact, body language)
Functions of Nonverbal
Communication
1.
Complement
a message
2.
Contradict
other messages
3.
Repeat
verbal ones
4.
Regulate
communication
5.
Substitute
for verbal ones in certain settings
Expressions of
Nonverbal Behaviour
1.
Paralanguage
-
Rate,
pitch, volume
-
Nuances
in speech that affect verbal messages
2.
Chronemics
-
Attitudes
towards time
Monochromic
Culture:
-
People
do one thing at a time; prefer to see things finished before moving on to
something else
-
People
tend to articulate solutions during uncertainty and think in terms of linear
(sequential, time-ordered) patterns
-
Time
is more tangible
Polychromic
Culture:
-
People
think about and attempt to do a number of things simultaneously
-
May
experience high degree of information overload
-
Time
is less tangible (so feelings of wasted time are not as prevalent as they would
be in a monochromic culture)
3.
Proxemics
-
Personal
space (Edward Hall)
-
4
zones (Intimate/Personal/Social/Public)
-
Contact
vs noncontact cultures
4.
Oculesics
-
Eye
contact
-
Communicates
meanings of respect and status
-
Regulates
turn-taking and interpersonal distance
5.
Olfactics
-
Smell
(can positively or negatively affect the oral message)
6.
Haptics
-
Touch
(communicating through the use of body contact)
-
Can
communicate social hierarchy
7.
Kinesics
-
Body
movements (Facial
expressions/Gestures/Posture and stance)
Facial Expressions:
-
Conveys
emotions and attitudes
-
7
universal emotions in facial expressions
(Sadness/Happiness/Disgust/Anger/Surprise/Fear/Contempt)
Gestures:
-
Varies
from culture to culture (one gesture may mean something else in another
culture)
-
Accessible
to conscious awareness, can be explained and taught to outsiders
Posture and Stance:
-
The
way someone sits, stands or walks can convey positive/negative nonverbal
messages
8.
Chromatics
-
Colours
have cultural connotations
9.
Silence
-
Degree
of emphasis and meaning placed on silence differs across cultures
LECTURE
FIVE
Folk Culture
-
Not
the national culture of a nation
-
Traditional
expressive culture shared within cultural groups
-
Particular
customs, creative arts, rituals and cultural products
-
Not
produced for financial gains (no relationship to profit)
-
Not
controlled by any particular industry (advertising/media)
-
Expresses
and confirms cultural identities/groups
-
Not
meant to be packaged or exported around the world
-
Cannot
always be practiced by anyone
Note:
cultural differences are often highlighted to serve the needs of travel
advertisements, product endorsements and international businesses (the line
between folk and pop culture is becoming increasingly blurred)
Pop Culture
-
Systems
or artefacts that most people share and know about
-
Populist
(made popular by and for the people)
-
Produced
by culture industries (products of popular culture seen as commodities that can
be economically profitable)
-
Driven
for financial gains
-
Found
EVERYWHERE
-
Fills
a social function (acts as a platform for dealing with social issues and
relationship building
Note:
pop culture does not have to win over the majority of people to be “popular” –
people often seek out or avoid specific forms of pop culture
Encoding = the construction of
textual meaning by popular culture institutions within specific social contexts
Decoding = the interpretation
of the text’s meaning by receivers (performed by various audiences in different
social contexts – members have different interests at stake)
Encoders = media people
(content creators) who rely on the audience’s social identities to fashion
their texts to sell to particular markets
Decoders = consumers
(audience) who decode based on social context (social identities)
·
Media
responds to the different social and political needs of groups with different
cultural identities (they cater to different cultural identities)
·
Readers
consume only those cultural texts that fulfil important cultural needs and
resist those that do not. (Basically, the readers just consume what interests
them and resist what does not)
CULTURAL
TEXTS DO NOT NECESSARILY REPRESENT CULTURAL IDENTITIES.
Resisting Popular
Culture
-
People
resist forms of popular culture by refusing to engage in them
-
Resistance
could be due to the way that cultural identity is being constructed, or the way
these groups are represented (if there was a form of pop culture that deeply
offended you or your religion, nationality, ethnicity etc, odds are you
wouldn’t willingly accept said form of pop culture)
-
Not
all members of any cultural group have the same reaction to various popular
images though
·
People’s
knowledge of places is largely influenced by pop culture
·
Pop
culture images are more influential in constructing particular ways of
understanding other cultural groups than our own (we believe what pop culture
says about other cultural groups but not our own)
Pop Culture and
Stereotyping
-
Stereotypes
are connected to social values and judgements about other groups of people
-
Pop
culture creates and reinforces stereotypes, especially for people who do not
travel and interact in a relatively homogenous social circle
-
Stereotypes
of ethnic groups are represented in the media
-
Positive
portrayals do not always equate to positive stereotypes
-
Negative
stereotypes have negative consequences for members of that social group and
breed self-fulfilling prophecy
-
Preconception
from media may yield more positive intercultural interaction
U.S. Pop Culture and
Power
-
Uneven
flow of cultural texts between the U.S. and the rest of the world
-
U.S.
pop culture internationally well-known but Americans are not exposed much to
pop culture from outside the U.S.
-
Most
pop culture that is expressed in non-English languages has a hard time on the
global scene
-
Many
cultural groups around the world worry about imbalance between exchange of U.S.
pop culture and other popular culture texts and impact of cultural imperialism
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