跨文化交际第五章PPT课件

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1、Chapter 5 Culture Shock in Intercultural Communication1Goals: 1. to identify the 5 stages of culture shock 2. to identify the definitions of HC and LC 2n“Culture Shock”, first identified in 1958 by anthropologist Kalvero Oberg, is a long term psychological stress that all human beings experience whe

2、n they move to a completely new cultural environment. 3n Culture shock usually sets in the first few weeks of moving to a new environment, though sometimes can take longer to surface. n Culture shock, like a disease, has causes, symptoms and cures. 41. Culture Shock refers to the traumatic tr:mtik e

3、xperience that an individual may encounter when entering a different culture. expresses the lack of direction, the feeling of not knowing what to do or how to do things in a new environment, and not knowing what is appropriate or inappropriate.5 the physical and emotional discomfort one suffers when

4、 coming to live in another country or a place different from the place of origin troublesome feelings such as depression, loneliness, confusion, inadequacy, hostility, frustration, and tension, caused by the loss of familiar cues from the home culture62. Symptoms of culture shock na. physical sympto

5、ms over-concerned about cleanliness of food, bedding, and dishes, extreme stress on health and safety; fear of physical contact with anyone in the new country; great concern over minor pains and skin eruptions (出疹); craving “home cooking”; use of alcohol and drugs; and a decline in work quality. 7b.

6、psychological symptoms insomnia insmni , fatigue, isolation and loneliness, disorientation, frustration, criticism of new country, depression, nervousness, self-doubt, irritability, anger, and emotional and intellectual withdrawal. 893. Causes of culture shock Cultural stress Social alienation Socia

7、l class and poverty-wealth extremes Financial matters Relationships and family considerations10a. Cultural Stress Entering an unfamiliar culture is stressful; in fact, transitions of any type are both psychologically and physically stressful. Problems with housing, climate, services, or communicatio

8、n in another language bring additional stress. 11b. Social Alienation An aspect of culture shock that can have adverse effects upon the newcomers to a culture is social alienation and the feelings of loneliness that are associated with being isolated from friends and the home culture. 12c. Social cl

9、ass and poverty-wealth extremes Class distinctions do exist in many countries,but are so complicated and subtle that visitors from other countries often miss the nuances nju:ns (细微差别细微差别) and even the existence of a class structure.13d. Financial matters Adapting to a new culture and reentering the

10、home culture involve financial adjustments, such as cost and availability of housing, banking practices, use of credit cards and checks, and costs of schooling.14e. Relationships and family considerations Problems related with relationships such as failure of the spouse and other family members to a

11、dapt to the new culture are a major factor in the early return of expatriates. 154. Stages of culture shock The honeymoon stage The hostility stage The recovery stage The adjustment stage The biculturality stage16 The first stage of initial contact, sometimes called the “honeymoon” stage or initial

12、euphoria ju:f:ri (幸福愉快感), is where everything is new and exciting. - eager to please people around, cooperation, interest in listening to peoplea. the “honeymoon” stage 17E.g. nA European-based joint venture company has just hired Mr. Wang. With his fine university record, English proficiency and go

13、od work record, he successfully competed with many other applicants to win the entry-level position. The company has just built a state-of-the-art (顶尖水准的) factory in the outskirts of his hometown, which means that he can go ahead with his plans to marry without delay.18 b. the hostility stagethe cri

14、sis or disenchantment (失望失望) stage The second stage is characterized by frustration, anger, anxiety and sometimes depression.- tired of listening to and speaking another language, difficult to work with, try everyones patience19E.g.nA Westerner in China who suspects he is being cheated by a vendor m

15、ay simply toss his bag of fruit back and walk away, or he might start yelling and accusing in whatever language he is able to manage.20c. the recovery stage (the reintegration stage) The third stage is characterized by gaining some understanding of the new culture.-a new feeling of pleasure and sens

16、e of humor, a certain psychological balance, a feeling of direction21E.g.nThe same Westerner who 6 month earlier walked away from the street vendor in anger, now confidently enters a Chinese hotel ready to bargain for a reduction in the foreigners room mate.22d. the adjustment stage In the fourth st

17、age, people realize the new culture has good and bad things to offer. This integration is accompanied by a more solid feeling of belonging. (double or triple integration) -feel good/at ease, successfully adjusted to the new culture23E.g.nWu Lian, studying in America now, has learned which of her cla

18、ssmates are worth spending time with and how to ask them the right questions to learn what she needs to know. She has made new friends.24nBy this time she is able to accept both the similarities and the differences between his home culture and the new culture. She becomes more sensitive to local peo

19、ple and as a result, her relationship with them is becoming warmer and more personal. Life is becoming more comfortable.25e. the biculturality stage (the full adjustment stage) Biculturality: the healthy and even ideal stage of adaptation in which ones original cultural world view remains intact as

20、alternative cultural frames are acquired. In the final stage people become able to cope comfortably in both home and new cultures. However, full adjustment can take years. 26nAt this stage the person has grown as a human being and has been replaced by a new one that functions at a higher level of hu

21、man sensitivity and self-awareness.275. Reverse culture shocknmay occur upon returning to the home country if a person has adjusted exceptionally well to the host culture.n return/reentry culture shocknreturnees28There are usually two elements that characterize re-entry:nAn idealized view of homenTh

22、e expectation of total familiarity (that nothing at home has changed while you have been away) A problem arises when reality doesnt meet these expectations. Home may feel so foreign. 29nReverse culture shock is usually described in four stages:qDisengagementqInitial euphoriaqIrritability and hostili

23、tyqReadjustment and adaptation6. Stages of reverse culture shock 30 nStage 1 begins before you leave your host country. You begin thinking about re-entry and making your preparations for your return home. You also begin to realize that its time to say good-bye to your friends abroad and to the place

24、 youve come to call home. The hustle and bustle of finals, good-bye parties, and packing can intensify your feelings of sadness and frustration. You already miss the friends youve made, and you are reluctant to leave. Or, you may make your last few days fly by so fast that you dont have time to refl

25、ect on your emotions and experiences.31 nStage 2 usually begins shortly before departure, and it is characterized by feelings of excitement and anticipation - even euphoria - about returning home. This is very similar to the initial feelings of fascination and excitement you may have when you first

26、entered your host country. You may be very happy to see your family and friends again, and they are also happy to see you. The length of this stage varies, and often ends with the realization that most people are not as interested in your experiences abroad as you had hoped. They will politely liste

27、n to your stories for a while, but you may find that soon they are ready to move on to the next topic of conversation.32 nStage 3 You may experience feelings of frustration, anger, alienation, loneliness, disorientation, and helplessness and not understand exactly why. You might quickly become irrit

28、ated or critical of others and of home culture. Depression, feeling like a stranger at home, and the longing to go back abroad are also not uncommon reactions. You may also feel less independent than you were while abroad.33 Stage 4na gradual readjustment to life at home. Things will start to seem a

29、 little more normal again, and you will probably fall back into some old routines, but things wont be exactly the same as how you left them. You have most likely developed new attitudes, beliefs, habits, as well as personal and professional goals, and you will see things differently now. The importa

30、nt thing is to try to incorporate the positive aspects of your international experience while abroad with the positive aspects of your life at home.34353637nA. Defense mechanisms against culture shock repression regression isolation rejectionnThese methods are not helpful because they prevent us fro

31、m making necessary adjustment to the new culture.7. Strategies for managing culture shock 38nB. Alleviating culture shock learning throughout your stay get involved aster simple tasks try to understand learn to live with ambiguity be empathetic (移情) be flexible and resourceful (机智的) be humorous39nIn

32、 his book Beyond Cultures (published in 1976 by Anchor Press/Doubleday, in New York ), Hall distinguishes among cultures on the basis of the role of context in communication and classify culture patterns into high-context culture and low-context culture.8. High-context Culture & Low-context Culture4

33、0ContextnAccording to Hall, context refers to the stimuli, environment, ambience mbins (周围环境) surrounding an event.nHall arranged low-and high-context countries on a continuum as follows:German North American French Spanish Greek ChineseGerman-Swiss Scandinavian English Italian Mexican Arab Japanese

34、LC culturesHC cultures41n高高日本人中国人韩国人非裔美国人美国土著人阿拉伯人希腊人拉丁美洲人意大利人英国人法国人美国人斯堪的纳维亚人瑞士人德国人低低428-1 What is HCHall states: n“High context transactions feature pre-programmed information that is in the receiver and in the setting, with only minimal information in the transmitted message.n Low context transac

35、tions are the reverse. Most of the information must be in the transmitted message in order to make up for what is missing in the context.” 43Low context culturenrefers to groups of cultures that value individual orientation and overt communication codes and maintains a heterogeneous normative struct

36、ure with low cultural demand characteristics.44High context culturenrefers to groups of cultures that value group identity orientation and covert communication codes and maintains a homogeneous normative structure with high cultural demand characteristics.45nIn high-context cultures most of the info

37、rmation is in the physical context or is internalized in the people who are a part of the interaction. Very little information is actually coded in the verbal message.nIn low-context cultures, most of the information is contained in the verbal message, and very little is embedded in the context or w

38、ithin the participants468-2 Some Features of HC & LCnHigh-context establish social trust first value personal relations and goodwill agreement by relations and goodwill negotiations slownLow-context get down to business first value expertise and performance agreement by specific, legalistic context

39、negotiations as efficient as possible47 Low Context High Context8-3 Comparing low-to high-context culturesTends to prefer direct verbal interactionTends to understand meaning at one level Tends to prefer indirect verbal interactionTends to understand meaning at many socio-cultural levels Is generall

40、y less proficient in reading nonverbal cuesIs generally more proficient in reading nonverbal cuesValue individualismValue group membershipRelies more on logicRelies more on context and feelingEmploy linear logicEmploy spiral logicSays no directlyTalks around point; avoid saying noCommunicates in hig

41、hly structured (context) messages, provides details, stresses literal meanings, gives authority to written informationCommunicates in simple, ambiguous, non-contexted messages; understands visual messages readily48nIllustrations Context and Chinese Language by Edward Hall,1976nChina, the possessor o

42、f a great and complex culture, is on the high-context end of the scale. One notices this particularly in the written language of China, which is 35 hundred years old and has changed very little in the past 3 thousand years. The need for context is experienced when looking up words in a Chinese dicti

43、onary. To use a Chinese dictionary, the reader must know the significance of 214 radicals (偏旁, 部首) ( there are no counterparts for radicals in the Indo-European languages). 49nFor example, to find the word for star one must know that it appears under the sun radical. To be literate in Chinese, one h

44、as to be conversant (精通) with Chinese history. Another interesting sidelight (花絮新闻; 趣闻) on the Chinese orthography is that it is also an art form. To my knowledge, no low-context communication system has ever been an art form. Good art is always high-context; bad art, low-context.50Cultural differen

45、ces at the airportnYou will notice an interesting phenomenon at the arrival gates of international airports. Usually there is a group of family members or a host waiting to meet the Chinese, Japanese, and other Asians who are getting off the airplane. Often there is no one waiting to meet the Wester

46、ners who are arriving. They just collect their baggage and then take a taxi or a bus to their destination.51nApparently the Asians think that no one arriving in an unfamiliar place should be left to find their on their own. They need people at this time. Westerners are more likely to assume that cer

47、tain predictable services will be available such as hotel booking counters and transportation services and that they can find these and the city and already learned a lot about the airport, hotels, tourist site, what people he will need to contact for particular purposes once he gets there, where to

48、 get a good dinner, and more.52nWesterners, as low-context communicators, look for, trust and use impersonal sources of information while communicators from more high-context cultures prefer personal sources of information.53 A cross-cultural dialoguenForeign affair officer (FAO): Foreign teachers a

49、sk me for lots of information before they come to China.nForeign teacher (FT): What do you tell them?nFAO: I tell them theyll find out everything that they need to know when they get here. nFT: Oh.nFAO: Yes, my office and the teaching departments arrange everything for them. Every foreign teacher ha

50、s a contact person to help them with problems of teaching and daily life.54nWesterners appreciate the personal help they receive when they come to China, but they also want low-context information to help them plan, act and adjust to a new situation. nHigh-context communicators need the low-context

51、messages they receive, but without human helpers they experience their new cultural situation as cold and impersonal.558-4 Comparing U.S. and Foreign ViewsHow U.S. Persons How Foreigners View View Themselves U.S. Persons Informal, friendly, casual Undisciplined, too personal Egalitarian Insensitive

52、to status Direct, aggressive Blunt, rude, oppressive Efficient Opportunistic, obsessed with time Goal-/achievement-oriented Promise more than they deliver Profit-oriented Materialistic Resourceful, ingenious Deals more important than people Individualistic, progressive Self-absorbed Dynamic, identify with work Driven Enthusiastic, prefer hard sell Deceptive, fearsome Open Weak, untrustworthy56

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