Culture and Components of Culture
Culture and Components of Culture
Culture and Components of Culture
Intercultural Communication
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
1. Definition:
>300 definitions
(1960)
Many more today
cultura animi“:
cultivation of the soul
the evolved human
capacity to classify and
represent experiences
with symbols, and to act
imaginatively and
creatively (# instinctively)
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
An integrated
system of learned
behavior patterns
which are
characteristic of the
members of ONE
society and which
are not a result of
biological
inheritance. - Hoebel
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
- Culture is the
shared
assumptions, values
and belief of a group
of people which
result in
characteristic
behaviors
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
2. Classification:
- material culture:
the physical
artifacts created
- non-material
culture: the
intangibles as
language, customs
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
2. Components of
Culture
- Communication
component
- Cognitive component
- Behavioral
component.
- Material component
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
Cognitive component
- Ideas: mental representation and are used to
organize stimulus. When Ideas are link together
it will organize into larger systems of
information which will become knowledge.
- Knowledge: a storage of information fact or
assumption, and these knowledge can be
passed down from one generation to another.
CULTURE AND COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
1. Definition:
- (commūnicāre -"to
share")
- a process exchange
information between
individuals through a
common system of
symbols, signs, or
behavior.
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
- the act of
conveying
intended
meanings from
one entity or
group to another
through the use of
mutually
understood signs
and semiotic
rules.
Semiotic rules: 3 levels
- Syntactic: formal properties of signs and
symbols
- Pragmatic : concerned with the relations
between signs/expressions and their users
- Semantic: study of relationships between signs
and symbols and what they represent.
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
2. Classification
- Verbal : the words and
sounds people emit
when communicating.
- Nonverbal : facial
expressions, gestures,
and other things that
don’t require sound,
but still offer a
message.
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
2. Aspects of
communication
Listeners: happens in
several different ways.
- discrete (bottom-up):
often involves
listening for specific
information (like a
number or name)
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
- global (top-down):
global listening
primarily means
listening for the main
idea and the
corresponding
subtopics.
- interactive
(combining discrete
and global at the
same time):
approach combines
both.
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
An active listener:
■ stays focused on the
speaker’s main
points (more global
than discrete)
■ tunes out all potential
distractions
■ listening as
objectively as
possible
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
■ be flexible and open-
minded when new
topics or ideas are
raised
■ uses eye contact or
other nonverbal cues,
or fillers, such as
yeah,uh huh, ok, I know
, what you mean, or
equivalent expressions
in another language
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
Notes
■ should be organized by
each main idea
■ You should focus on key
words
■ Skipping small and
inessential words to
save time using
abbreviations
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
■ should not be writing
every minute that
someone else is talking,
or you won’t be able to
hear new points.
■ listen carefully and
evaluate the information
to capture the full
meaning of the content
in your notes.
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
■ Your goal is to write all
the main points and all
the key subpoints you
heard Make sure your
comprehension the
important points and the
relationship of what you
hear.Use as few words
as possible.
■ If you miss a piece of
information, leave a
space in your notes
where it belongs and ask
e afterward
COMMUNICATION AND ASPECTS OF COMMUNICATION
■ Participating in a
study group is a great
way to compare your
understanding of the
key information with
someone else’s
understanding.
two or three heads
are better than one!
III. LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND
COMMUNICATION
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Culture: a set of
beliefs, values,
norms, customs,
traditions, rituals,
and a way of life
that differentiates
one group from
another.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Language is an
integral part of
culture and human
culture cannot
exist without it.
intricately related
and dependent on
each other.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Language: maintain
and convey culture
and cultural ties
- the primary
instrument in the
expression,
transmission, and
adaptation of
culture.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Culture’s influences
on language:
- Language is formed by
culture, while culture
is influenced and
impacted by language.
- Without culture,
language cannot exist.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
- Cultural premises
(tiền đề) and rules about
speaking are
intricately tied up
with cultural
conceptions of
persons, agency,
and social
relations.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Thought
processes and
perceptions of
reality differ from
one culture to
another. How
people think and
speak is
ultimately
determined
largely by their
culture.
1. Language and culture
- language: express and
display heritage and history
makes it unique, and that
creates a difference from one
to another.
- Linguistic differences the
mark of another culture
create divisiveness among
nations, even among
different groups of the same
nation.
language can be a pathway
to culture.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
“Culture” can be
defined as the rituals,
practices, and symbolic
and physical artifacts
that shape the
behaviors of
individuals, groups,
institutions, and
societies.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
- Communication indirectly
create cultures. Through
communication, cultural
characteristics (customs,
roles, rules, rituals, laws,
or other patterns) are
created and shared.
cultures are the
"residue" of social
communication.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Without
communication and
communication
media, it would be
impossible to
preserve and pass
along cultural
characteristics from
one place and time
to another.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Culture is created,
shaped, transmitted,
and learned through
communication. The
reverse is also the
case; that is,
communication
practices are largely
created, shaped, and
transmitted by
culture.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
3. Verbal Communication
Direct and Indirect
communication:
- The dimension of
communication on which
cultures differ the most
- The one affecting more
aspects to the
communication dynamic
- Count for more cross-
cultural misunderstanding
than any other single
factor.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
- People: intuitive
understanding, no need to
spell things out and say so
much
- Message may be
expressed in term of what
is not said or done
- Goal and purpose:
preserving and
strengthening the
relationship
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Direct / Low context:
- Less collectivist, more
individualist with less
well-developed in-
groups
- Independent lives and
fewer shared
experiences less
instinctive
understanding
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
- Less context the spoken
word carries most of the
meaning
- No need to read anything
not said or written
- Goals: getting or giving
information
- No culture uses the direct
or indirect approach
exclusively but tend to be
more or less.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
A good interpreter is
someone who is able to
translate not only words
but also communication
styles
We can begin by
becoming aware of our
own preferred styles and
then learning ways to
show respect for other
styles we encounter
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
developing intercultural
competence
1. recognize communication
styles and to respect each of
them
2. modify listening strategies in
order to understand meanings
communicated in another
style.
3. adapt one's own
communication style to
different contexts and, little by
little, learn to communicate in
styles which match those of
another
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
4. Nonverbal
Communication
- Spoken words:
often not even the
primary mean of
communication
(high context
cultures)
- People rely on
Nonverbal
behaviors to send
message
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
- Communicate feelings,
express friendship and
humor and irony,
warning and power
relations, questions and
trust
- requires attention,
understanding, and
the development of
specific competencies
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
- Do not have inherent
meaning (that
automatically come with
it) but the meaning
assigned by people
- People from different
cultures (sometimes)
assign different
meaning to the same
behavior
misunderstandings
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
golden rule:
- Observing
- Trying to understand,
4 elements of intercultural
communication
- Two people (or two
groups)…
- of different cultures (with
the definition of «culture»
being quite broad)…
- in interaction…
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
- who negotiate
common meaning
the importance of
not merely trying to
communicate but
also trying to
understand
particularly
interesting
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
The metaphor is
often used iceberg
to talk about culture
behaviours,
institutions, the
arts, etc.)
a larger invisible
part (cultural
values, norms,
beliefs)
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
2. Cultural Values
- the lenses through
which we view and
evaluate the attitudes
and actions of others.
- form the basis of all our
attitudes and actions,
and this brings us into
harmony or conflict with
the cultural values of
groups in which we are
members
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
- The invisible part of our
culture
- The importance of the
connection between
cultural values and
behaviour can be
explored using the
work of two well-
known models of
cultural value
orientations
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
- different perceptions and
interpretations of «the
same» situation or word or
moment of silence can be
even within a single
culture.
- It’s greater in interacting
from different cultural
backgrounds and values
the concept of perception
is central when we think
about intercultural
communication.
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
3. Culture Shock
Culture shock is the temporary disintegration of one’s
central identity, one's sense of self.
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
incapable of
constructing any
stability in their world,
incapable of making
reliable meaning in a
new context.
feelings of grief
- losing the self , habits
and, behaviours,
values,
- things which we often
were not even aware of
Introduction to Intercultural
communication
generates uncertainty,
stress and resistance, and
thus requires a great deal
of energy and strength,
especially for people who
expect themselves to carry
on in their work and social
life.
learning and adapting in a
new culture: tiring and
unsettling process
challenging but rewarding
experience
Introduction to Intercultural
communication