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Chapter 6 - What Is The Connection Between Verbal Communication and Culture PDF

This document discusses the connection between verbal communication and culture. It covers several topics: 1) Human language has distinctive features like arbitrariness and abstractness, and follows rule patterns for phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. There are over 7,000 languages worldwide. 2) Language serves cultural worldview, social reality, cognitive and group membership functions. It shapes thought and perspectives. Communication styles vary along a linear-relational and low-high context continuum across cultures. 3) When communicating interculturally, one should practice empathy, paraphrasing, multiple presentation modes, language variation, attentive nonverbals, and understanding differences in low-high context patterns to

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
337 views15 pages

Chapter 6 - What Is The Connection Between Verbal Communication and Culture PDF

This document discusses the connection between verbal communication and culture. It covers several topics: 1) Human language has distinctive features like arbitrariness and abstractness, and follows rule patterns for phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. There are over 7,000 languages worldwide. 2) Language serves cultural worldview, social reality, cognitive and group membership functions. It shapes thought and perspectives. Communication styles vary along a linear-relational and low-high context continuum across cultures. 3) When communicating interculturally, one should practice empathy, paraphrasing, multiple presentation modes, language variation, attentive nonverbals, and understanding differences in low-high context patterns to

Uploaded by

Asep Mulyana
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Understanding Intercultural

Communication Second Edition


Chapter 6

What is the Connection between


Verbal Communication & Culture?

Stella Ting-Toomey & Leeva C. Chung

Revised by Ron Compton

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS


PowerPoint Slides Designed by Alex Flecky and Noorie Baig
TODAY’S MENU
I. Human Language: Distinctive
Features and Rule Patterns
II. Appreciating Diverse Language
Functions
III. Verbal Communication Styles:
A General Framework
IV. Intercultural Reality Check: Do-Ables
Do you know…

• The Top-3 Countries with the Most Native


English-Language Speakers? (textbook, p. 112)

• The Top-3 Countries with the Most Native


Spanish-Language Speakers? (p. 113)

• The Top-3 Most Widely-Spoken Languages


Worldwide? (p. 115)
(Ethnologue Database, 2010-11)
I. Human Language: Distinctive Features
and Rule Patterns
Language:
An arbitrary, symbolic system that labels
and categorizes objects, events, groups,
people, ideas, feelings, experiences, and
many other phenomena.

Can you guess how many languages exist


worldwide? (textbook, p. 112)
I. Human Language: Distinctive Features
and Rule Patterns . . .

A. Distinctive Language Features


• Arbitrariness: sounds and symbols
Ω A  € ∞
• Abstractness: concrete to abstract levels
• Meaning-Centeredness: denotative and
connotative levels of meaning
• Creativity: productivity, displacement, eta-
communicative
I. Human Language: Distinctive Features
and Rule Patterns . . .

B. Multiple Rule Patterns

• Phonological Rules: Smallest unit of a word


• Morphological Rules: Multiple sounds
• Syntactic Rules: Grammar
• Semantic Rules: Meaning
• Pragmatic Rules: Contextual rules
II. Appreciating Diverse Language
Functions

Click here to find out the “Meaning of Love”


From 7 Billion Others from YouTube
II. Appreciating Diverse Language
Functions . . .
A. Cultural Worldview Function
• Linear worldview vs. Relational worldview
B. Everyday Social Reality Function
C. Cognitive Shaping Function
• Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis: “the shaper of ideas”
• Strong Form vs. Weak Form
D. Group Membership Function
• Code switching
E. Social Change Function
II. Appreciating Diverse Language
Functions: Cultural Worldview Function
Linear Worldview Relational Worldview
Rational thinking Connected thinking

Objective reasoning Context-based reasoning


Facts and evidence Context and relationship

Polarized interpretation Continuum interpretation

Analytical dissecting mode Holistic big-picture mode

Tangible outcome Long-term relational


outcome
III. Verbal Communication Styles:
A General Framework
Low Context C. Patterns High Context C. Patterns
Individualistic values Collectivistic values
Linear logic Spiral logic
Direct verbal style Indirect verbal style
Matter of fact tone Understated or animated
tone
Informal verbal style Formal verbal style
Verbal assertiveness or
talkativeness Verbal reticence or silence

Verbal self-enhancement Self-humbling style


style
III. Verbal Communication Styles:
A General Framework . . .
Country Examples

Low Context High Context

Germany USA Saudi Arabia Japan


Switzerland Canada Kuwait China
Denmark Australia Mexico S. Korea
Sweden UK Nigeria Vietnam
II. Verbal Communication Styles:
A General Framework . . .
LCC – HCC Application Analysis:
• Roommates Video (2:16) – Textbook Resource
• The Joy Luck Club - Film Clip
“Waverly’s Story” – DVD Chapter 3, 41:24-46:32

Discussion Questions:
• Compare and contrast the different verbal styles of the
people in the videos.
• What did the low-context communicator say/do? What did
the high-context communicator say/do?
• What recommendations do you have for these
communicators to make this conversation go better?
II. Verbal Communication Styles:
A General Framework . . .
Beliefs Expressed in Talk and Silence
• Silence is interpreted and evaluated
differently across cultures and between
persons.
• How do you interpret silence?

Take a look at how the Japanese people


use silence to mean different things…
IV. Intercultural Reality Check: Do-Ables
When using your native language with a
nonnative speaker, to be flexible verbal
communicators, try to practice the
following guidelines:

– Practice intercultural empathy


– Learn to paraphrase and perception check
– Use multiple modes of presentation
– Practice language variation usage
– Pay attention to nonverbal tone of voice
– Understand basic differences of LCC and HCC patterns
– Use nonverbal gestures to complement
– Master the language pragmatic rule function
Parting Thoughts…

If you talk to a man


in a language he understands,
that goes to his head.
If you talk to him in his language,
that goes to his heart.
~ Nelson Mandela

Learn a new language


and get a new soul.
~ Czech Proverb

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