Another Definition of Culture

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Culture Values and perspectives shared by people who are conditioned by similar education and life experience Regional: country, area, community Religion:
Advertisements

Communication and Culture James Starnes Roger Williams James Starnes Roger Williams.
Communicating and Cooperating with Brazilians Presenter: Richard R. Gesteland Global Management (USA)
What We Talk About When We Talk About Culture Frances Westbrook English Language Officer U.S. Embassy, Moscow.
Multicultural Education 1 English Seminar BK21 Vocational Education and Workforce Development Team
Chapter 6 & 7. What is language? Language allows us to talk with others Language allows us to understand or disagree with others. Language allows us to.
Intercultural Management Effective Communication in a Global Environment.
Communicating and Negotiating with Brazilian Business Partners
Language, Society, and Culture
Communication Skills for Administrators and Board Members
Culture & Management Definitions of culture Theoretical frameworks of culture How culture affects management.
This presentation introduces students to the anthropological definition and use of the concept of culture. It focuses on all of the aspects of culture.
Anthropological Concepts
Anthropological Concepts. Fundamental Concepts & Principles Holism Function Relativism Comparison Structure Adaptation Culture.
Culture: Definitions. Matthew Arnold: Culture and Anarchy (1869) “But there is of culture another view, in which not solely the scientific passion, the.
Communication and Culture
Cross-cultural Communication and Negotiation
Chapter 2 Culture. What is Culture? Beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects that, together, form a people’s way of life Material culture – physical.
High-Context and Low-Context Cultures Dr. Edward Hall Comparison of Characteristics The Joy Luck Club Connections.
High-Context Culture Now watch this short video and note the differences in the communication patterns between high and low context cultures:
1 PowerPoint slides by R. Dennis Middlemist, Professor of Management, Colorado State University.
Chapter 10 Improving Performance Through Empowerment, Teamwork, and Communication Learning Goals Describe why & how organizations empower employees. Distinguish.
Play and Culture Paul Taylor Teamwork Continued...
Copyright 1998 by Prentice Hall, Inc., adapted by Prof.Dr. vom Kolke 4-1 Chapter 4 Communication.
1 Management Communications and Intercultural Contexts Zeenat Jabbar.
> > > > Improving Performance Through Empowerment, Teamwork, and Communication Chapter 10.
“ ELT: Bridging Cultures through Teaching and Learning” Jerrold Frank English Language Officer United States Department of State, U.S. Embassy Moscow.
Beyond Culture Edward T. Hall, 1976.
THE CULTURAL ENVIRONMENT  Overview Developing marketing activities in harmony with the local culture can mean the difference between success and failure.
BRAZILIANS AS COMMUNICATORS. COMMUNICATION COMMUNICATION=EMPATHY.
Culture Chapter 3.
CULTURE “Culture is a dynamic process of solving human problems and dilemmas in areas of human relationships, time, and nature.” Fons Trompenaars “A collective.
CULTURE   Culture is the system of shared beliefs, values, customs, behaviours, and artefacts that the members of society use to cope with their world.
Introduction to Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Isabella King CTLLS.
CHAPTER 11 Episodes, Contexts, and Intercultural Interactions
Adeyl Khan, Faculty, BBA, NSU 4 Chapter 8: Management, Leadership, and the Internal Organization 5 Chapter 9: Human Resource Management, Motivation, and.
High and Low-context Communication Styles
Communication In Our Lives, Fifth Edition by Julia T. Woods Chapter 7 Communication and Cultures.
Amity International Business School AIBS MBAIB 2 nd Sem Cross Cultural Management By KP Kanchana.
COPYRIGHT 2001 PEARSON EDUCATION CANADA INC. CHAPTER 10 1 CHAPTER 10 COMMUNICATION.
Ch. 3 Culture.
Copyright © 2002 Thomson Learning, Inc. Chapter 5: Language: Barrier and Bridge PowerPoint Presentation to accompany Looking Out, Looking In, Tenth Edition.
The Art of Networking Competences for Networking in European Education Cultural Diversity in Networks: Opportunities and Challenges.
“The DreamKeepers” Multicultural teachers will find this book a useful addition to the literature on curricular and instructional issues. Connections.
Relationship orientated cultures
Cultural Differences In Communication By Kjersti Naeringsrud Diplomatic Academy of London.
Copyright © 2007 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. The Cultural Environment Chapter 3.
Developed by Cool Pictures & MultiMedia PresentationsCopyright © 2004 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. The Cultural.
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1 ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Quizzes added to syllabus First Quiz:ANTH : 9/25.
Language CHAPTER TOPICS Language Is Symbolic
Section 1 FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS Interplay Interplay, Eleventh Edition, Adler/Rosenfeld/Proctor Copyright © 2010 by Oxford University Press, Inc.
Aspects of Intercultural Communication in Language Training High and Low Context Cultures Ginta Lauva-Treide Latvia MA Cult. and literature.
Culture and Communication
Cultural and Social Environment Sarath A. Nonis. What is Culture ? Culture is a set of traditional believes and values that are transmitted and shared.
Chapter 6 Culture.
1 Elements of Cultural Systems. 2 What is culture? Society Culture.
Cultural Awareness and Inter-cultural Communication.
Communicating Across Cultures
Cross Cultural Communication
Paciencia, tiempo al tiempo. Crear relaciones de amistad y confianza.
Culture and internatinal marketing. A continuously changing totality of learned and shared meanings, rituals, norms, and traditions among the members.
Chapter 2 Culture. Chapter Outline  Introducing Culture  Defining Culture  Cultural Knowledge  Culture and Human Life  Cultural Knowledge and Individual.
CHAPTER # 3 COMMUNICATING CROSS CULTURALLY Understanding the opportunities and challenges of communication in a diverse world..
Chapter 6 Adapting to Others: Bridging Culture and Gender Differences Mr. Quiros Doral Academy Prep Period 2/6.
1 Monochronic123456Polychronic Clock drive your time Situational drive your time Appointment timeDepend on people relation Take and keep commitment Concurrent.
BRAZILIANS AS COMMUNICATORS. COMMUNICATION COMMUNICATION=EMPATHY.
Unit Seven: Intercultural Communication Why is the Study of Intercultural Communication Important? Developments in technology and shifts in demographics.
Chapter 3 Communicating Interculturally
Communication Skills Week 3.
Communication and Culture
Presentation transcript:

Another Definition of Culture Edward Hall’s High Context & Low context cultures

John Bodley (1994): Diverse Definitions Topical: Culture consists of everything on a list of topics, or categories, such as social organization, religion, or economy Historical: Culture is social heritage, or tradition, that is passed on to future generations Behavioral: Culture is shared, learned human behavior, a way of life Normative: Culture is ideals, values, or rules for living Functional: Culture is the way humans solve problems of adapting to the environment or living together Mental: Culture is a complex of ideas, or learned habits, that inhibit impulses and distinguish people from animals Structural: Culture consists of patterned and interrelated ideas, symbols, or behaviors Symbolic: Culture is based on arbitrarily assigned meanings that are shared by a society

Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis Sapir (1921): “Human beings do not live in the objective world alone, nor alone in the world of social activity as ordinarily understood, but are very much at the mercy of the particular language which has become the medium of expression in that society.”

As a result of differences in language, people in different cultures will think about, perceive, and behave toward the world differently. Reality itself is already embedded in language and therefore comes preformed. Language determines, enabling and constraining, what is perceived and attended to in a culture, as well as the upper limits of knowledge.

Dr. Edward Hall Anthropologist and cross-cultural researcher Distinguished cultures on the basis of the role of context in communication Context: the whole situation, background, or environment connected to an event, a situation, or an individual. “It was taken out of context”: without the words or circumstances and so not fully understandable.

High-context cultures Hall's Model High-context cultures Long-lasting relationships Exploiting context Spoken agreements Insiders and outsiders clearly distinguished Cultural patterns ingrained, slow change Low-context cultures Shorter relationships Less dependent on context Written agreements Insiders and outsiders less clearly distinguished Cultural patterns change faster

Cultural Classification--Hall Low-Context Cultures - What Is Said Is More Important Than How or Where It Is Said U.S. Germany High-Context cultures - What Is Said and How or Where It is Said Are Significant Asia Latin America Middle East

Low-context in business Business before friendship Credibility through expertise & performance Agreements by legal contract Negotiations efficient

High-context in business No business without friendship Credibility through relationships Agreements founded on trust Negotiations slow & ritualistic

High and Low Context Cultures Factors / Dimensions High Context Low Context Lawyers A person’s word Responsibility for organizational error Negotiations Examples: Less important Is his or her bond Taken by top level Lengthy Japan Middle East Very important Get it in writing Pushed to lowest level Proceed quickly U.S.A. Northern Europe

Contexts: High and Low Low-Context High-Context Information and meaning are explicitly stated in the message Individual “internalizes” meaning and information, so that less is explicitly stated Values Individualism Values Group Sense Values direct verbal interaction and is less able to read nonverbal expressions Values indirect verbal interaction and is more able to read nonverbal expressions High--Less Words (more other clues Low- words, words, words

Contexts: High and Low Low-Context High-Context Tends to use “logic” to present ideas Tends to use more “feeling” in expressions Tends to emphasize highly structured messages, give details, and place great stress on words Tends to give simple, ambiguous, noncontexting messages Emphasizes linear logic Emphasizes spiral logic

Low-Context Ideas In a low-context culture, Hall argues, “Most of the information must be in the transmitted message in order to make up for what is missing in the context.” To members of a low-context culture, speakers in a high-context culture seem to talk around a subject and never get to the point.