Understanding Social Distance in Intercultural Communication英语论文.doc
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1、Understanding Social Distance in Intercultural CommunicationVictoria Guilln NietoUniversity of Alicantevictoria.guillenua.esSince the 1950s there has been an increasing interest in intercultural communication as a field of multidisciplinary research, which has probably been strengthened by todays gl
2、obalisation process, as well as by the process of European convergence and the current social phenomenon of massive immigration to the Western world. Intercultural communication focuses on face-to-face or person-to-person interaction and takes place between people who are operating within different
3、cultural systems. The study of intercultural communication has tried to throw light on the question of how people from diverse cultural backgrounds understand one another. On the doorstep of European convergence, the issue of intercultural competence is a crucial one. In this discussion we would lik
4、e to analyse in detail the underlying reasons that might explain the emergence of social distance in intercultural communicative encounters. To achieve our purpose, we will draw on three key concepts: (a) the cultural frame, (b) the cultural unconscious and (c) the silent language. Four variables ar
5、e suggested as a core around which to explore the emergence of social distance: (a) time, (b) space, (c) context and (d) communication.KEY WORDS: intercultural communication, social distance, cultural frame, cultural unconscious, silent languageDesde mediados del siglo XX ha ido creciendo progresiva
6、mente el inters por el estudio de la comunicacin intercultural desde una perspectiva multidisciplinar. Dicho inters acadmico se ha visto fortalecido por el proceso de globalizacin que la sociedad est experimentando hoy en da, as como por el proceso de convergencia entre los pases que conforman la Un
7、in Europea y el fenmeno social de la inmigracin masiva hacia occidente. La comunicacin intercultural aborda el estudio de la interaccin personal, bien sta se desarrolle cara a cara en un medio oral o de persona a persona en un medio escrito, que se produce entre interlocutores que no comparten el mi
8、smo sistema de referencia cultural. Durante ms de medio siglo, las investigaciones llevadas a cabo en el campo de estudio de la comunicacin intercultural han intentado arrojar luz sobre la naturaleza de los problemas comunicativos que surgen entre personas de distintas culturas. Hoy en da, en el umb
9、ral de la convergencia europea, la adquisicin de una competencia comunicativa intercultural adquiere una relevancia especial. En este artculo nos gustara analizar con detalle algunas razones que nos ayuden a explicar el modo en que la distancia social surge como una barrera cultural que entorpece la
10、 fluidez comunicativa en los encuentros comunicativos interculturales. Nuestro modelo de anlisis se construye sobre la base de tres pilares conceptuales fundamentales, a saber, el marco de referencia cultural, el inconsciente cultural y el lenguaje silencioso. Asimismo, nos serviremos de cuatro vari
11、ables como instrumental para definir el ncleo alrededor del cul investigaremos el concepto de distancia social: (a) el tiempo, (b) el espacio, (c) el contexto, y (d) la comunicacin.PALABRAS CLAVE: comunicacin intercultural, distancia social, marco de referencia cultural, inconsciente cultural, lengu
12、aje silencioso1. Introduction.Since the 1950s there has been an increasing interest in intercultural communication as a field of multidisciplinary research, which has probably been strengthened by todays globalisation process, as well as by the process of European convergence and the current social
13、phenomenon of massive immigration to the Western world. Since the end of the Second World War up to the middle of 20th century, much theoretical background came from a variety of sources, especially from the USA. The US army, which had been operating in many different countries and faced numerous cu
14、ltural problems, provided the first information about the significance of cultural awareness. Relevant contributions were also made by US entrepreneurs, who began to be aware of the fact that the USA needed to know more about other cultures if it was to increase its overseas trade. And finally, info
15、rmation came from multinational companies which began to face the problem of cultural clash in multicultural work teams. Some of the most relevant publications on intercultural communication are: the investigation done by the anthropologist E. T. Hall and published in his famous books The Silent Lan
16、guage (1959) and The Hidden Dimension (1966); the research conducted by another two anthropologists, F. Kluckhohn and F. Strodtbeck and published in their well-known book Variations in Value Orientations (1961); the study carried out by the Dutch social psychologist and engineer, G. Hofstede and pub
17、lished in his groundbreaking book Cultures Consequences (1980); E. C. Stewart and M. J. Bennetts American Patterns: An Intercultural Perspective (1991); the investigation done by other Dutch scholars, F. Trompenaars and Ch. Hampden-Turner whose findings were published in their very successful books,
18、 The Seven Cultures of Capitalism (1993) and Riding the Waves of Culture (1997); and more recently, D. Walker, Th. Walker and J. Schmitz presented their comprehensive cultural orientations model in Doing Business Internationally (2003).The study of intercultural communication has tried to throw ligh
19、t on the question of how people from different cultural backgrounds understand one another. Just a few decades ago, says M. J. Bennett (1998: 1), this question was one faced mainly by diplomats, expatriates, and the occasional international traveller. Today, living in multicultural societies within
20、a global village, we all face the question every day. In the last few decades, multiculturalism has spread like wildfire in America, Asia, Africa, Australia and Europe. For example, in the United States, African American, Hispanic and other ethnic groups are actively defending the validity of their
21、identities while the Anglo population has begun to sense an urgency for understanding these perceptions. (Singer 1998: 104). In Australian society, different Anglo-Celtic, aboriginal and ethnic cultural values systems coexist. British society offers another vivid example of multiculturalism: the Ang
22、lo population lives together with Indians, Muslims, Asians, Africans, and more recently Eastern Europeans have added themselves to the list. And even Spanish society, which was preserved from foreign influence during Francos dictatorship, has been experiencing the effects of massive immigration from
23、 Northern Africa, South America, Eastern Europe and Asia since the second half of the 1990s.Cultural diversity may be experienced at two different levels by modern societies, i.e. intranational and international. For example, at an intranational level, Spanish society may face intercultural communic
24、ation in a variety of ways. Firstly, we should consider intercultural communication between the different Spanish cultural groups making up the Spanish nation, i.e. Castilians, Galicians, Catalans, Andalusians, Basques, etc. Secondly, we should bear in mind intercultural communication between the Sp
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