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      代做COMU2170、代寫Python/c++設計編程

      時間:2024-08-07  來源:合肥網hfw.cc  作者:hfw.cc 我要糾錯



      Week 2 lecture notes
      Sem 2, 2023
      1
      Week 2: Communication and culture

      This week’s lecture will explore how the expansion of human communication beyond
      national, geographic, and time boundaries influences definitions of communication; and how
      culture and communication mutually influence each other, generating diverse behavioural
      expectations in different cultural contexts.

      Learning Objectives
      After this lecture, you should be able to:
       Recognise the multifaceted nature of culture and communication.
       Identify different components and characteristics of culture and communication.
       Evaluate the influence of culture on communication.

      About the required readings
      The chapter by Dodd is a classic reading on culture. It defines culture and explores elements
      of culture through a model that organises elements of culture into three layers. Elements of
      culture and their functions in each layer are explained with examples, as well as the
      relationship among the three layers of culture in the model. Understanding characteristics and
      functions of elements of culture helps you to develop cultural sensitivity and appreciate the
      influence of culture on communication, which is a prerequisite for effective intercultural
      communication.

      The article by Lie and Bailey addresses the questions: What does your name mean? Could it
      reflect the cultural, historical, or political context at the time you were born? The authors
      analysed the patterns of naming across four generations in Lie’s Chinese Indonesian family.
      They argue that naming practices are not just a function of personal taste; it can reflect the
      larger-political and historical contexts. The article shows that seeming contradictions and
      puzzles in the names and naming practices in Lie’s family can be explained by the specific
      social and political challenges faced by members of the family. A very interesting reading!
      Required readings
      Dodd, C. (1998). Chapter 3 of Dynamics of intercultural communication
      (5th ed.). Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill.

      Lie, S., & Bailey, B. (2017). The power of names in a Chinese Indonesian
      family’s negotiations of politics, culture, and identities. Journal of
      International and Intercultural Communication, 10(1), 80-95.

      [Available on Blackboard]
      Critical thinking
      Think about your learning experience as a student (including your
      learning experience in the high school). Are students encouraged to
      engage in critical thinking in your culture? Are students encouraged to
      challenge authority? Why or why not?
      COMU2170
      Week 2 lecture notes
      Sem 2, 2023
      2

      Components and characteristics of culture
      Culture permeates almost all aspects of our life (e.g., food, clothing, shelter, music, language,
      artifacts, family, health systems, and kinship systems – to mention just a few). For decades
      scholars across the academic spectrum have attempted to define culture. Almost 200
      definitions can be located, each attempting to delineate the boundaries and inclusions of the
      concept. In its general sense, culture can be broadly defined as the total way of life of a group
      of people, comprising the deposit of knowledge, experience, beliefs, values, traditions,
      religion, notions of time, roles, spatial relations, worldviews, material objects and
      geographic territory. Culture can be defined at the macro (national) level or micro
      (subcultural) levels, that is, within the larger cultural context, there are sub-cultural groups
      that can be defined by, for example, gender, religion, age, or geographic region and so forth.

      In the required reading by Dodd (1998), he organised various components of culture into
      three layers:
       The inner core (history, identity, beliefs and values, and worldviews of a cultural
      group).
       The intermediate layer (activities as expressed in technology, material objects, roles,
      rules, rituals, customs, communication patterns and artistic expressions).
       The outer layer (formalised systems including economy, politics, family, health care
      and education).

      Key characteristics of culture are:
       Holistic. The whole is more than simply the sum of the interconnected parts.
       Learned. We learn our cultural rules and norms through communication.
       Dynamic. It is subject to change over time.
       Ethnocentric. There is a tendency for people to believe that one’s own culture is
      superior to other cultures.

      Components and characteristics of communication
      Similar to culture, it is almost impossible to find a single, all-encompassing definition of
      communication. Communication scholars propose that the concept might better be theorised
      as a “family” of related concepts to reflect the multifaceted nature of communication. Two
      dominant models representing communication processes are:
       The early linear model, which views communication as transmission of information.
      This model is also known as the transmission model.
       The interactive model, which views communication as two-way and influenced by the
      context in which it occurs. The interactive model is the model that intercultural
      researchers tend to adopt.

      Key characteristics of communication are:
       Dynamic. Communication is a dynamic process; although a specific communication
      act has definite beginning and ending points, the overall communication process does
      not.
       Interactive. Communication requires active participation of at least two persons.
      Write down three things that are important to you in your culture, and then
      place them in the respective layers of culture.

      COMU2170
      Week 2 lecture notes
      Sem 2, 2023
      3
       Symbolic. We use verbal and nonverbal symbols to create meaning.
       Contextual. We interact with others in a specific setting.
      The influence of culture on communication (refer to Dodd’s chapter)
      Many cultural imprints are subtle and elusive, if not beyond conscious recognition at times.
       Culture teaches us significant rules, rituals, and procedures; the process through
      which we learn those rules is called socialisation.
       Culture cultivates and reinforces beliefs and values.
       Culture teaches us how to develop relationships with others.

      Approaches to studying culture
       Emic approach views each culture as a unique entity that can only be studied from
      inside that culture. This approach focuses on identifying culture-specific aspects of
      concepts and behaviour. Aligned with the emic approach are cultural anthropologists
      who use ethnography as research methods to obtain in-depth and rich knowledge of
      particular cultural communities or groups from the native’s point of view.
       Etic approach believes that culture can be examined with predetermined categories
      that can be applied to all cultures in the search for cultural universals. Etic researchers
      (e.g., cross-cultural psychologists) attempt to identify universal aspects of human
      behaviour across cultures (beliefs, values, worldviews) and seek to segregate common
      components of culture and test hypotheses.

      After class…
      Next week (Week 3)
      In Week 3, we will explore the process of human perception and its influence on intergroup
      and intercultural relations.
      Write down two cultural rules you have learned as you grew up.
      Which rule you have learned at a conscious level, and which was
      learned at an unconscious level? Has your interpretation of those two
      rules changed over time? Why (not)?

      Critical thinking
      What do you think are indicators of successful communication? Does it
      make sense to say that two parties in conflict are communicating
      successfully if they decode each other’s messages correctly but continue
      to disagree? Why?
      Watch an old movie from your grandparents’ time. Then watch another
      contemporary movie but of similar themes (e.g., romantic love, family, gender
      roles). Are there are any changes in values and beliefs? Would you agree that
      any movie is a product of a specific culture at a specific time in history?

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