Culture and Interpersonal Communication / Edition 1

Culture and Interpersonal Communication / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
0803929455
ISBN-13:
9780803929456
Pub. Date:
11/01/1988
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
ISBN-10:
0803929455
ISBN-13:
9780803929456
Pub. Date:
11/01/1988
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
Culture and Interpersonal Communication / Edition 1

Culture and Interpersonal Communication / Edition 1

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Overview

The authors examine the theoretical influence of culture on interpersonal communication. They provide a framework for guiding future, and for interpreting past, research in the field.

Because cross-cultural comparisons of interpersonal communication must be theoretically based, culture must be treated as a variable in research. This concept is presented in the first two chapters and then applied to specific areas of research. Previous research is reinterpreted in the light of this concept, and explanations are provided on how culture has influenced specific areas such as situational factors, verbal and nonverbal communication styles, interpersonal and intergroup relationships.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780803929456
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Publication date: 11/01/1988
Series: SAGE Series in Interpersonal Communication , #8
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

William B. Gudykunst (Ph.D., Minnesota, 1977) is Professor of Speech Communication at the College of Communications, California State University, Fullerton. Bill has written and edited numerous works for SAGE, including the Handbook of Intercultural and International Communication, 2/e, and Bridging Differences: Effective Intergroup Communication, 3/e as well as the best-selling introductory undergraduate texts Building Bridges: Interpersonal Skills for a Changing World (Houghton Mifflin) and Communicating with Strangers: An Approach to Intercultural Communication, 3/e (Mc Graw-Hill). He is extremely well known in the discipline and is one of its most prolific writers/scholars in the areas of intercultural communication and human communication theory.

Stella Ting-Toomey (Ph D, University of Washington) is a professor of human communication at California State University, Fullerton (CSUF). She has published numerous books and over more than 100 articles/chapters on the topics of intercultural conflict competence and ethnic identity negotiation process. A recent book title is Understanding Intercultural Communication, Second Edition (with Leeva Chung; Oxford University Press). Her publications have also appeared in the International Journal of Intercultural Relations, Communication Monographs, Human Communication Research, and The International Journal of Conflict Management, among others. Dr. Ting-Toomey’s teaching passions include intercultural conflict theory and practice and intercultural communication training. She is the 2008 recipient of the 23-campus wide CSU Wang Family Excellence Award, and the 2007–2008 recipient of the CSU-Fullerton Outstanding Professor Award. She has lectured widely throughout the United States, Asia, and Europe on the theme of mindful intercultural conflict competence.

Table of Contents

List of Tables9
List of Figures9
Series Editor's Introduction11
Preface13
1.Culture and Communication17
Interpersonal Communication17
Culture and Sociocultural Systems27
An Organizing Framework31
Plan for the Book37
2.Cultural Variability39
Individualism-Collectivism40
Low-and High-Context Communication43
Hofstede's Dimensions45
Kluckhohn and Strodtbeck's Value Orientations50
Parsons's Pattern Variables54
Boldt's Structural Tightness55
Conclusion56
3.Situational Factors61
Norms61
Rules68
Roles71
Networks77
Conclusion79
4.Self-Conceptions81
The Self-Concept81
Facework84
Social Identity93
Conclusion96
5.Verbal Communication Styles99
Direct Versus Indirect Style100
Elaborate Versus Succinct Style105
Personal Versus Contextual Style109
Instrumental Versus Affective Style112
Conclusion115
6.Nonverbal Dimensions and Context-Regulation117
Environment: A Dialectical Perspective118
Privacy-Regulation, Proxemics, and Haptics123
Chronemics128
Interpersonal Synchronization Processes130
Conclusion132
7.Personality135
Implicit Personality Theory136
Self-Monitoring138
Self-Consciousness141
Communication Apprehension144
Communicator Style145
Locus of Control146
Conclusion148
8.Social Cognitive Processes149
Information Processing149
Attributional Processes160
Conclusion167
9.Affective Processes169
Universality of Emotion Expression and Recognition169
Cultural Variability in Affective Communication174
Related Research on Culture and Psychopathology181
Conclusion182
10.Interpersonal Relationships183
Universal Dimensions of Social Relations183
Social Penetration Processes186
Uncertainty Reduction Processes192
Conclusion198
11.Intergroup Relationships201
Ingroup Bias202
Intergroup Contact203
Communication in Ingroup and Outgroup Relationships205
Interpersonal Relationships Between Members of Different Cultures208
Conclusion216
12.Concluding Remarks219
Generality of the Framework219
Unique Methodological Issues223
Final Remarks230
References235
Index275
About the Authors278
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