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Cross Cultural Communication Theory and Practice PDFDrive (1)
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- Critique of Trompenaars’ research
Concept of culture in layers
To understand Trompenaars’ concept as expounded in Riding the Waves of Culture, one has to think of an onion and to ‘unpeel it layer by layer’. This is similar to Hofstede’s concept, as seen in Chapter 2. The outer layer is explicit and includes aspects of culture which we can see, feel, hear, eat and com- municate with, even if we are only visiting as a tourist. We should, however, realize that these are observable manifestations of a deeper level of culture. Prejudices mostly begin at this symbolic and observable layer. Each opinion we utter about explicit culture says more about where we come from than about the country or people we are judging. The middle layer is concerned with our norms and values, our sense of what is ‘right and wrong’, ‘good and bad’, as seen in a society’s laws, system of government and institutions. At the core are our basic assumptions about our existence and our relationship with the environment. These are so deeply embedded that they are truly basic and unconscious. In the latest edition of Riding the Waves of Culture Key Thinkers in Cross- Cultural Communication (2) 53 published in 2012, Trompenaars describes the model of culture as ‘a series of nested spheres’, which is very much the same concept. Critique of Trompenaars’ research Hofstede and Trompenaars both remain acknowledged pioneers in cross- cultural communication theory. Hofstede’s value dimensions have clearly influenced Trompenaars’ research. Universalism versus particularism can be relatively associated with Hofstede’s uncertainty avoidance, while Trompenaars’ individualism versus collectivism reflects Hofstede’s indivi- dualism and collectivism dimension. Although Hofstede and Trompenaars share more similarities than diffe r- ences, Trompenaars has extended his focus on culture by covering people’s relationship with time and the environment, areas not researched by Hofstede, and these can be seen as innovative and unique to Trompenaars, as he places particular emphasis on these factors. Overall, Trompenaars’ research is more recent than Hofstede’s and thus it reflects some of the important world changes, particularly the growth of globalization and concern for the environment. However, Trompenaars’ work can be criticized as there are a relatively limited number of responses from many of the countries surveyed, except from the UK and the Netherlands. Europe accounts for 57.3 per cent of respondents, whereas Africa provides only 4.5 per cent, with nine countries having so few respondents that they are statistically insufficient to develop a multidimensional model. In addition, 65 per cent of respondents are male and most are managers. Moreover, neither Hofstede nor Trompenaars deals in sufficient detail with the part gender plays in their examination of culture. In addition, some of Trompenaars’ cultural dimensions are more difficult to understand than those of Hofstede and appear to overlap each other. However, his use of continua rather than scored dimensions allows him greater flexibility in describing cultural differences as orientations rather than absolutes. Trompenaars himself maintains that he has aimed to produce his research findings in a way that is easily understandable and of practical use in the training of staff for work in the international environment. In this he has been very successful. It can be argued that real- life cultures very often do not have strict physical boundaries like nation states. As a result, values and beliefs can assume different forms outside these artificial boundaries. Therefore, the findings of both Hofstede and Trompenaars can be criti- cized on several grounds. However, it is important to realize that although they have generated controversy, this has been the spur for further research into attempts to evaluate differences in culture and their effect on interna- tional management. In both cases, the increasing effects of the contribution of globalization to cultural change had not been fully recognized at the time when they carried out their main research. |
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