intercultural communication chapter 2 culture and intercultural communication
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Intercultural Communication
Chapter 2Culture and Intercultural Communication
www.newmaneducation.com 1
What is Culture?
• A learned set of shared interpretations about beliefs, values, norms, and social practices, which affect the behaviors of a relatively large group of people.
What is Culture?
• Learned through:– Interactions with parents, guardians,
siblings, friends, etc.– Expectations received from the natural
human events around us.
• Also provide the filters that help make sense of messages.
What is Culture?
• Set of shared interpretations that exist in the minds of people.
• When these symbolic ideas are shared with others, they form the basis of culture.
• A culture can form only if symbolic ideas are shared with a relatively large group of people.
What is Culture?
• Culture involves the sharing of beliefs, values, norms, and social practices.– Beliefs what the world is like or what is T/F.– Values what is good and bad or important.–Norms what is appropriate and expected.– Social practices are the predictable behaviors.
• Taken together, they form a “way of life.”
What is Culture?
• Culture affects behaviors.– Shared interpretations affect large
groups.– Provide guidelines for meaning,
importance, and what should or should not be done.
– Provides predictability in human interactions.
• But, not a complete explanation for all behaviors.
What is Culture?
• Culture involves large groups of people.– Small groups of people are not a
“culture.”– The term culture describes large,
societal levels of organization.– Similar to ethnicity, but not the same.
What culture is not
• Nation– A political term– Culture and nation are not equivalent
terms.–Nations regulate the political behaviors.– Cultures exist within the boundaries of a
nation-state and influence the regulations that a nation develops.
–Many unique cultures can exist within the political boundaries nations.
What culture is not
• Race– Incorrectly used to refer to a genetic or
biologically-based differences.– Race is a political, legal, and social
distinction.–More encompassing than culture or nation.– Can create visible and important
distinctions and sometimes plays a part in establishing separate groups.
– Often forms the basis for prejudice.
What culture is not
• Ethnicity– Refers to a wide variety of groups that
share a common language, religious traditions, nation-state, cultural system, and historical origins.
– People may share ethnic beliefs but may be members of different cultures.
What culture is not.
• Subculture and coculture– Subculture exist in the midst of larger
cultures.– Coculture used to hide the implication
of a hierarchical relationship.– Both subculture and coculture are
redundant and imprecise terms. – Reference cultural groups in their own
right.
Why Cultures Differ
• There are six forces that help generate cultural differences.–Unique history– Ecology– Technology– Biology– Institutional networks– Interpersonal communication patterns
Why Cultures Differ
• Unique history– Descriptions of historical events
transmitted across generations form the shared knowledge that guides a culture’s collective action.
– You have to know what people have gone through to understand what they want and don’t want.
Why Cultures Differ
• Ecology– Conditions affect formation and
functioning.– Often hidden because the climate and
environment are pervasive and constant.
– Availability of water and land contour.– Largely overlooked in the study of
cultural differences.
Why Cultures Differ
• Technology– Changes in available technology can
radically alter a culture’s survival.–Media effects communicate across time
and distance.–Minimizes geographic distances– Also influences how people perceive
other cultures.
Why Cultures Differ
• Biology–More variation within races than between
races.– Based primarily political and social roles.– Distinctions often include or exclude others.– Cannot explain differences among cultures.–Most differences result from cultural
learning or environmental causes.
Why Cultures Differ
• Biology– Race is an imperfect term for categorizing
human populations.– Visible cultural differences can be affected
by climate and other external constraints.–Most humans have the same genetic origin.– The United Nations and scholars generally
agree that there is no scientific basis for race.
Why Cultures Differ
• Biology– Race should be understood as a social,
political, and personal term that is used to refer to those who are believed by themselves or by others to constitute a group of people who share common physical attributes.
– Again, race can form the basis for prejudicial communication that can be a major obstacle to intercultural communication.
Why Cultures Differ
• Institutional networks– Include government, educational
systems, religious organizations, etc.–New media allows easier creation of
institutional networks.– Religion binds people and helps
maintain cultural bonds.• In Christianity and Judaism people belong
to a particular church or synagogue.• Hindus visit any temple throughout India.
Why Cultures Differ
• Interpersonal communication patterns– Verbal communication systems.–Nonverbal communication systems.– Intercultural communication from one
generation to another.– Cultures assign and organize
importance to their interpersonal communication patterns.
Why Cultures Differ
• Interrelatedness of cultural forces– Each cultural force works in conjunction
with and is influenced by the others.– Adaptations and accommodations are rarely
made consciously.– Cultures adjust to the world by altering
cultural assumptions.– Changes to institutions or traditions cause
members to alter behaviors which can result in changes to institutions or traditions.
Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
• Related terms– Intracultural communication– Interethnic or Interracial
communication– Cross-cultural communication– International communication
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