Insight into Cross-Cultural Communication Barriers from the Perspective of Conversation Analysis
File(s)
Date
2020-06Author
Sharipzianova, Faina
Publisher
Division of Communication, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point
Advisor(s)
Halkowski, Timothy
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This research is designed with the intention of more deeply exploring the concept of cross-cultural communication barriers that have been recently looked upon mostly from the perspective of obvious larger cultural differences such as social norms defined by customs and traditions. A crucial facet of this study is drawing attention to the necessity of concretely defining the difference between the terms “language barriers” and “cross-cultural barriers” that are often, and arguably erroneously, used interchangeably, thus limiting their precision. Using linguistic and conversation analysis, this study looks at interactions between different groups of English speakers with varying cultural and linguistic backgrounds and observes the breakdowns in communication. The chosen approach of analyzing the intercultural interaction on the micro-level by spotting the sequential patterns and zooming in at the parts of the data where participants show signs of misunderstanding led to identifying three main ways in which cross-cultural barriers manifest themselves, namely the appearance of irrelevant turn, lack of recipient design, and unsuccessful collaborative completion.
Subject
Conversation Analysis
Intercultural Communication
Communication Barriers
Language Barriers
Collaborative Completion
Recipient Design
Bilingual