Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Intercultural communication studies communication across different cultures and social groups
and describes the many communication processes and related issues among groups of individuals
from varied cultural backgrounds.
Knowing a foreign language is just part of the parcel—the other party’s cultural background,
values, and beliefs also need to be understood. This is where intercultural communication skills
are indispensable. They are needed to successfully communicate with people from other cultures
and social groups. And intercultural communication skills also include a willingness to be
adaptable and accept that other cultures may communicate and do things differently.
What is the meaning of intercultural communication?
Intercultural communication essentially means communication across different cultural
boundaries. When two or more people with different cultural backgrounds interact and
communicate with each other or one another, we can say that intercultural communication is
taking place. So intercultural communication can be defined as the sharing of information on
different levels of awareness between people with different cultural backgrounds, or put simply:
individuals influenced by different cultural groups negotiate shared meaning in interactions.
Intercultural communication theories
There are many different intercultural communication types and theories. The most important
ones are:
Social science approach
This model focuses on observing the behavior of a person from a different culture in order to
describe it and compare it with other cultures. It also examines the ways in which individuals
adjust their communication with others in different situations, depending on who they are talking
to. For example, we would tell the same story differently to our best friend than we would to our
grandmother.
Interpretive approach
This theory focuses on accumulating knowledge about a culture through communication in the
form of shared stories based on subjective, individual experiences. The main focus is on
intercultural communication as it is used in particular speech communities, so ethnography plays
a major role here. Because the individual context is so important for this model, it does not strive
to make generalized predictions based on its findings.
Dialectical approach
This method examines aspects of intercultural communication in the form of six dichotomies,
namely cultural vs. individual, personal vs. contextual, differences vs. similarities, static vs.
dynamic, history vs. past-present vs. future, and privilege vs. disadvantage. A dialectical
approach helps us think about culture and intercultural communication in complex ways, so we
can avoid categorizing everything in either-or dichotomies by adopting a broader approach and
acknowledging the tensions that must be negotiated.
Critical approach
This approach examines cultures according to their differences compared to the researcher’s own
culture and, in particular, how these cultures are portrayed in the media. The critical approach is
complex and multifaceted and therefore leads to a rich understanding of intercultural
communication.
The differences between Multicultural vs. Cross-cultural vs. Intercultural
You may have also come across the terms multicultural communication and cross-cultural
communication. How do these differ from intercultural communication? Let’s take a look!
Multicultural communication
Multicultural refers to how a group or team is composed, in particular a group that is made up
of people with different nationalities. In fact, communication in multicultural settings has
become commonplace today.
Cross-cultural communication
Cross-cultural means comparing two or more different cultures; so cross-cultural
communication examines the varying communication styles of different cultural groups.
Communication
Intercultural, finally, refers to exchanges taking place between different cultures.
So, in a nutshell, intercultural communication relates to interactions among people from different
cultures, while cross-cultural communication involves comparing interactions among people
from the same culture to those from another culture.