TY - JOUR
T1 - Young people's beliefs about intergenerational communication
T2 - An initial cross-cultural comparison
AU - Williams, Angie
AU - Ota, Hiroshi
AU - Giles, Howard
AU - Pierson, Herbert D.
AU - Gallois, Cynthia
AU - Ng, Sik Hung
AU - Lim, Tae Seop
AU - Ryan, Ellen Bouchard
AU - Somera, Lilnabeth
AU - Maker, John
AU - Cai, Debra
AU - Harwood, Jake
PY - 1997/8
Y1 - 1997/8
N2 - This article examines young people's perceptions of their conversations with older people (age 65-85) across nine cultures - five Eastern and four Western. Responses from more than 1,000 participants were entered into a cross-national factor analysis, which revealed four initial factors that underlie perceptions of intergenerational conversations. Elder nonaccommodation was when young participants reported that older people negatively stereotyped the young and did not attend to their communication needs. On the other hand, elder accommodation was when older people were perceived as supportive, attentive and generally encouraging to young people. A third factor was respect/ obligation and a fourth factor labeled age-irrelevant positivity described a situation where young people felt conversations with much older people were emotionally positive and satisfying, age did not matter. Examining cross-cultural differences, some East versus West differences were observed, as might be expected, on the basis of simplistic accounts of Eastern collectivism versus Western individualism. However, the results challenge commonsense notions of the status of old age in Eastern versus Western cultures. On some dimensions, participants from Korea, Japan, People's Republic of China, Hong Kong, and the Philippines appear to have relatively less positive perceptions of their conversations with older people than the Western cultures - the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. But there was also evidence of considerable cultural variability, particularly among Eastern cultures - variability that has heretofore all too often been glossed over when global comparisons of East versus West are made. A range of explanations for these cultural differences is explored and implications for older people in these societies are also considered.
AB - This article examines young people's perceptions of their conversations with older people (age 65-85) across nine cultures - five Eastern and four Western. Responses from more than 1,000 participants were entered into a cross-national factor analysis, which revealed four initial factors that underlie perceptions of intergenerational conversations. Elder nonaccommodation was when young participants reported that older people negatively stereotyped the young and did not attend to their communication needs. On the other hand, elder accommodation was when older people were perceived as supportive, attentive and generally encouraging to young people. A third factor was respect/ obligation and a fourth factor labeled age-irrelevant positivity described a situation where young people felt conversations with much older people were emotionally positive and satisfying, age did not matter. Examining cross-cultural differences, some East versus West differences were observed, as might be expected, on the basis of simplistic accounts of Eastern collectivism versus Western individualism. However, the results challenge commonsense notions of the status of old age in Eastern versus Western cultures. On some dimensions, participants from Korea, Japan, People's Republic of China, Hong Kong, and the Philippines appear to have relatively less positive perceptions of their conversations with older people than the Western cultures - the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. But there was also evidence of considerable cultural variability, particularly among Eastern cultures - variability that has heretofore all too often been glossed over when global comparisons of East versus West are made. A range of explanations for these cultural differences is explored and implications for older people in these societies are also considered.
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U2 - 10.1177/009365097024004003
DO - 10.1177/009365097024004003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0031536764
SN - 0093-6502
VL - 24
SP - 370
EP - 393
JO - Communication Research
JF - Communication Research
IS - 4
ER -