Author/Authors
Meyer, Heinz-Dieter State University of New York (Albany) - School of Education - Department of Educational Administration Policy Studies, Turkey
Title Of Article
Globalization, Culture, and the Non-Convergence of German and American Norms of Interaction: Revisiting the Lewin Hypothesis
شماره ركورد
23497
Abstract
Cultural globalization raises the question regarding the convergence of the norms governing face-to-face interaction in different cultures. As increased cross-cultural communication and mobility lowers the barriers of interaction, many argue that local cultural norms will inevitably give way to global standards, as defined by globally leading cultures such as the Americans. In this paper I take a critical look at the idea of converging cultural norms between two countries, Germany and the United States. Drawing on Simmel’s theory of face-to-face interaction and Kurt Lewin’s analysis of German-American differences, I find that for three key levels of interaction —self-disclosure in the stranger-to-member passage, conversation style, and the construction of friendship— characteristic German versus American norms of interaction persist with little evidence of convergence.
From Page
245
NaturalLanguageKeyword
Cultural Globalization , Convergence of Cultural Norms , Social Interaction , Cross , Cultural Communication , Georg Simmel , Kurt Lewin
JournalTitle
Turkish journal of sociology
To Page
264
JournalTitle
Turkish journal of sociology
Link To Document