Friday, April 27, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
Summary
For almost 3 months, I have stretched my comfort boundaries
and experienced part of a culture I never thought I would. I have conducted informative
interviews about religion and its affect on people’s lives as well as attended
a predominately catholic event. I have learned a lot about how people’s lives
are affected by religion and how religion impacts people’s lifestyles. I have also
learned about a different perspective by looking at this intercultural
communication from the perspective of the majority.
It is evident that some people have committed their lives
fully to religion. Several people that I have spoken with have committed the
next several years to serving their faith in a variety of ways. I cannot say
that I agree with these people, but it has been interesting feeling their
compassion about this subject. I spoke to one person who is graduating with a
future in medicine, but giving up the first two years to do missionary work.
Figure 1. Gallup
survey results
From my point of view, it seems like many people who are
strongly religious seem to have a very narrow mindset. This is even supported
in the results from a survey concluding that 30% of Americans take the Bible
literally (Jones, 2011). After collecting a
pretty good amount of data myself, it became easier to put myself in their
shoes. It becomes less close minded and more just expressing a strong religious
identity. Some of my interviewees said that they couldn’t consider picking a
different religion, and among those people, there was a spectrum of opinions
when considering how they thought other religions should be viewed (Emily Cook,
personal communication, March 14, 2012) A number of answers came with something
along the lines of “the church is the only source that has the fullness of
truth” (Beth Cowles, personal communication, April 3, 2012) combined with “most
religions have some truth to them” (Katie Fenwick, personal communication,
March 9, 2012). I thought one of the more interesting results was that those ‘typical’
answers ended up in the middle of the spectrum, with people being on both ends
of their commitment to their faith and people being on opposite ends of what they
thought of other religions (Sarah Maresh and anonymous, March 8, 2012).
The next most interesting result I collected was what people
thought about their majority/minority experiences. This also ended up to
parallel what I learned in my experience. Most people shared that when they are
in the majority, it is easier to share and express their opinions. People in
the majority then paid different amounts of attention to the minority. Some
questioned the beliefs of the minority, why they believed what they did that
put them in the minority group, while others mostly ignored the minority
(anonymous, March 9, 2012). When considering the opposite scenario, when
religious people were in the minority, they almost always didn’t question their
beliefs and only became distraught when people in the majority were offensive.
For the most part, my results paralleled those predicted by Martin and Nakayama
in both religious identity and majority and minority communications (Cowles
2012). There ended up being a few outliers, which was as expected.
My experience at a catholic event was also very interesting.
I did not end up going to a service, due to time constraints, but rather a
social event following the service. I felt like this was a good opportunity to understand
this new culture, by experiencing life as they experience it, and not just the
service part. It was interesting especially because most of the people there
seemed to be of college age, so I expected more of a ‘normal’ college
atmosphere. The event ended up feeling like I was in the minority the entire
time, even though I knew a fair number of people there. Even when I did
interact with people, it quickly reverted to status of me being in the minority
(personal observations, March 23, 2012). Because of this, I feel like my
interviews gave me a much deeper insight on how catholic people lived and what
their culture was really about.
Now that all of my data has been collected and compiled, I realized
that I actually have learned quite a bit about intercultural communication. I
had originally designed my project to be about religious identity, but it has
also picked up aspects of majority/minority communications. I have learned that
to make a complete and accurate judgment about somebody, it is more important
to know exactly what their thoughts are instead of just guessing. There turned
out to be many people that were catholic, and shared many beliefs, but also
differed in a couple areas. These turned out to be primarily what they think of
other people. If I redid this project, I would have narrowed down my cultural
group criteria to be more specific than just catholic, because of the variety
of responses that I still managed to obtain. I have also learned that even if
you try something, you may be going about it completely wrong and not gain any
insight that you thought you would gain. When that happened, I returned to what
was more successful for me (interviews and talking to people individually) and
stayed away from going to actual events. I have also learned firsthand many of
the topics Martin and Nakayama have mentioned. Intercultural communication is
uncomfortable, but the benefits definitely outweigh the negative aspects. One
of the most important things I have learned is to retain motivation to not shy
away from intercultural situations, regardless of contexts and prejudices.
References
Jones, J. (2011).
In u.s., 3 in 10 say they take the bible literally. Gallup, Retrieved from http://www.gallup.com
Martin, J. N., & Nakayama, T. K. (2009). Intercultural
Communication in Contexts. McGraw-Hill Higher Education.
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