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8: Intercultural Communication

  • Page ID
    269391
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    • 8.1: Intercultural Communication Overview
      This section looks at intercultural communication as the exchange of messages and negotiation of meaning across cultures and languages. It shows how culture and communication shape one another, influencing identity, diversity, and access to resources worldwide.
    • 8.2: What is Culture?
      In this section we look at culture as a broad system of beliefs, values, and behaviors shaped by identity markers such as race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, sexual orientation, class, and more. It looks at concepts like privilege, power, and intersectionality and how they influence cultural identity and communication by showing how overlapping systems of difference affect people’s opportunities and experiences.
    • 8.3: Discussing Intercultural Communication
      In this section we look at sensitive but essential concepts such as privilege, ethnocentrism, and whiteness, which shape how people experience power, identity, and communication. By recognizing these dynamics, we can better understand cultural inequality and work toward more open, reflective, and inclusive dialogue.
    • 8.4: Belonging
      In this section we look at how people develop racial and cultural identity through models that explain the experiences of minority, majority, biracial, and global nomad individuals. These frameworks show that identity awareness evolves in stages and highlight empathy as a crucial skill for understanding and communicating across cultural differences.
    • 8.5: How Scholars Study Intercultural Communication
      This section looks at three key concepts that shape intercultural communication: high- and low-context communication, different speech styles, and collectivist versus individualist values. These frameworks show how cultures vary in how meaning is conveyed, how relationships influence communication, and whether individuals or groups are prioritized.

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    This page titled 8: Intercultural Communication is shared under a mixed 1.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Scott T. Paynton & Laura K. Hahn with Humboldt State University Students.