Cross Cultural Understanding | 21
CHAPTER III
STEREOTYPE
A stereotype is generalizations of people groups based on
past experiences, which are deep-rooted in the psyche of the
people.
In another definition, it is said that stereotype is a fixed
idea or image that many people have a particular type of person,
thing, or event, but sometimes it is not true in reality. Cultural
stereotypes mean applying both evidence and our existing beliefs
about the members of that cultural group.
Stereotypes are called
idiosyncratic
,
if only an individual
uses them, or they are social, or
collective
if they are widely shared
by a group of people. In everyday use, the concept of the
stereotype is used in various contexts: usually the word stereotype
is used to refer to members of some kind of collective: firemen
are courageous, blondes are less intelligent, Italians are noisy, and
so forth.
The
term stereotype itself, as allegedly used for the first
time by Walter Lippman in 1922, is used today to mean a readily
available image of a given social group, usually based on rough,
often negative generalizations. Although stereotypes can be
positive as well as negative, they are,
in everyday usage, most
often understood as irrationally based negative attitudes about
certain social groups and their members. The concept of the
'stereotype' itself was borrowed from old raised printing
22 | Cross Cultural Understanding
technology, where copies of a composed type were made by using
papier mache as molds for new printing plates,
identical to the
original, and used to produce the same image over and over
again.
In intercultural communication, in particular, it is vital to
distinguish between what is part of a person‘s cultural
background and what is part of their personality.
In Figure 4.1, Hofstede uses the model of the pyramid to
illustrate three levels of uniqueness in human mental
programming. Every person is
in some way like other people,
some, or none.
Figure 3.1: Levels of uniqueness
Personality
Culture
Human nature
Cross Cultural Understanding | 23
We do and think some things because we are humans: for
instance, we want to sleep, eat, and survive. These are universal
and inherited characteristics. We also do and think some things
because of our culture, this might determine. For instance: when
we
eat and sleep, and how far we try to survive. These are
characteristics which are specific to a particular group of people,
and are learnt. We also do and think some things because of our
individual personality. These characteristic are specific to us as
individuals, and are both inherited and learnt. When trying to
understand the behavior of a person it is important to consider all
of these three levels.
Within a culture there will be a range of attitudes, beliefs,
values, and behavior. It is possible to generalize about culture, but
care should be taken in applying
those generalizations to
individual. When we meet an individual, we cant tell where they
are on the range. (see Figure 3.2)
24 | Cross Cultural Understanding
Figure 3.2. How attitudes and belief are distributed
When a person makes inferences about a new person or
about some social event, they use their existing knowledge to
reduce the uncertainty in the situation. The less one knows about
the object, the more one uses stereotypical generalizations. In an
intercultural setting, one of the goals of
the participant is getting
to know the attitudes and personality of the communication
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