Intergenerational Communication Across Cultures: Young People's Perceptions of Conversations with Family Elders, Non-family Elders and Same-Age Peers

被引:63
作者
Howard Giles
Kimberly A. Noels
Angie Williams
Hiroshi Ota
Tae-Seop Lim
Sik Hung Ng
Ellen B. Ryan
Lilnabeth Somera
机构
[1] University of California,Department of Communication
[2] University of Alberta,Department of Psychology
[3] Cardiff University,Center for Language & Communication
[4] Aichi Shukutoku University,Foreign Language Department
[5] Kwangwoon University,Department of Communication
[6] City University of Hong Kong,School of Social Sciences
[7] McMaster University,Department of Psychology
[8] De La Salle University,Department of Anthropology
关键词
accommodation; deference; East Asians; family elders; intergenerational communication; intragenerational communication;
D O I
10.1023/A:1024854211638
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Young adults from three Western (Canada, U.S.A., and New Zealand) and three East Asian (The Philippines, South Korea and Japan) nations completed a questionnaire regarding their perceptions of interactions with family elders, non-family elders, and same-age peers. Results showed that East Asians perceived family elders to be as accommodating as same-age peers, whereas Westerners perceived family elders as more accommodating than their same-age peers. Participants in both cultural blocks indicated an obligation to be most deferential towards non-family elders, followed by family elders, followed by same-age peers. Whereas both groups perceived interactions with same-age peers more positively than with the two older groups, the Western group perceived the older age groups more positively than did East Asians. Intergenerational communication is reportedly be more problematic than intragenerational communication and, consistent with previous findings, this pattern is more evident in East Asian nations on some variables.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 32
页数:31
相关论文
共 134 条
[11]  
Chow N. W.(2000)Age vitalities across eleven nations Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 21 308-323
[12]  
Church A. T.(1994)Patronizing the young: Forms and evaluations International Journal of Aging and Human Development 39 33-53
[13]  
Coupland N.(1999)Husbands and sons in the United States and Japan: Cultural expectations and caregiving experiences Journal of Aging Studies 13 241-267
[14]  
Coupland J.(2001)Older adults' trait ratings of three age-groups around the Pacific Rim Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology 16 157-171
[15]  
Giles H.(1994)Vitality perceptions of age categories in California and Hong Kong Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 15 311-318
[16]  
Henwood K.(1996)College students' trait ratings of three age groups around the Pacific Rim Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology 11 307-317
[17]  
Edwards H.(2002)What's wrong with cross-cultural comparisons of subjective Likert scales: The reference-group problem Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 82 903-918
[18]  
Noller P.(1994)Filial Piety, authoritarian moralism, and cognitive conservatism in Chinese Societies Genetic, Social and General Psychology Monographs 120 347-365
[19]  
Giles H.(1990)Multiple stereotypes of the elderly and young adults: A comparison of structure and evaluations Psychology and Aging 5 182-193
[20]  
Giles H.(1998)Communicating with older adults: The influence of age stereotypes, context, and communicator age Human Communication Research 25 125-152