Speaking and social distance

kencarroll
May 19, 2008, 12:56 AM posted in General Discussion
My latest blog post talks about how the words we choose in conversation helps us either to bond, or to create social distance, sometimes without us realizing.
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excuter
May 19, 2008, 09:47 AM

Good points from you and the comments as well. But you may want to edit the text...it has some typos eg. : ...of a given social group *can it can* suggest an unwillingness... ^_^

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kencarroll
May 19, 2008, 03:40 PM

executer, Thx for the heads up.

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dave
May 19, 2008, 04:46 PM

That was an interesting article. Many of your observations are similar to ones I have made to myself while living in Taiwan. I can definitely relate to the point about western men not socializing with chinese men. While language plays a big role in creating a rift in communication I believe the larger barrier is cultural. Specifically the difference between western and chinese values and beliefs.

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dave
May 19, 2008, 04:59 PM

Just to add an observation of my own--it's interesting to see how the Chinese try to learn English in the same manner as they learn their native language; specifically the focus on memorization and repitetion of set phrases (chengyus for example). Also, because the Chinese seem to revere overly intellectualized/embellished ways of expressing things they believe that this is something that we value as well when speaking informal English. While I have made some generalizations since Western society does place some emphasis on sounding smart with big words--I don't believe we do it as much as the Chinese do. If you look at the large difference in language usage between spoken and written forms of Chinese I think this fact becomes really clear.