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Edward Twitchell Hall

    Edward T. Hall a été une figure pionnière de la communication interculturelle, explorant comment les humains perçoivent et utilisent l'espace et le temps. Son travail s'est penché en profondeur sur les dimensions spatiales culturellement spécifiques qui entourent les individus, introduisant des concepts tels que la proxémie et la distinction entre cultures polychroniques et monochroniques. Hall a également développé les idées de cultures à "haut contexte" et à "bas contexte", éclairant la manière dont l'information est transmise dans différents contextes culturels. Ses recherches, inspirées par sa vie et son travail auprès des tribus amérindiennes et par son service aux États-Unis, ont jeté les bases de l'étude académique des relations interculturelles, soulignant l'impact profond de la culture sur le comportement humain.

    Die Sprache des Raumes
    Verborgene Signale
    Verborgene Signale
    West of the Thirties
    Beyond culture
    Le langage silencieux
    • Le langage silencieux

      • 237pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Contribution à une meilleure compréhension entre les peuples, cet essai sur les systèmes de communication non-verbaux, sur le langage silencieux des comportements, a été mis au point en 1959

      Le langage silencieux
    • Beyond Culture is a proud celebration of human capacities. For too long, people have taken their own ways of life for granted, ignoring the vast, international cultural community that surrounds them. Humankind must now embark on the difficult journey beyond culture, to the discovery of a lost self and a sense of perspective. By holding up a mirror, Hall permits us to see the awesome grip of unconscious culture. With concrete examples ranging from James Joyceʼs Finnegans Wake to the mating habits of the bowerbird of New Guinea, Hall shows us ourselves. Beyond Culture is a book about self-discovery; it is a voyage we all must embark on if mankind is to survive

      Beyond culture
    • West of the Thirties

      Discoveries Among the Navajo and Hopi

      From 1933 to 1937, the great American  anthropologist Edward T. Hall lived and worked on  reservations in the Southwest, a frontier where four  cultures--Navajo, Hopi, Hispanic, and Anglo--clashed.  Re-creating that stark and haunting landscape, Hall  pieces together a firsthand account of two proud  worlds--the frugal, Pueblo-dwelling Hopi with their  isolated villages high on the mesa tops and their  deeply felt religious faith and the Navajos, whose  rhythm and ceremonious forms of respect Hall  learned as he worked with them. In these early  experiences, as Hall discovered the deeply human logic of  these tribes, he began to recognize how culture  itself, not only theirs but his own, was at work in  each person's behavior. The respect he felt and  diplayed won him a friendly Navajo nickname--Chiz  Chili, meaning Slim Curly Hair--and a mentor, the  great Indian trader, Lorenzo Hubbell. Set under the  vast arch of sky in a place of unforgettable  beauty, West Of The Thirties is  about the Navajos and Hopis as one receptive young  white man perceived them, but it is also about the  core of being human, which Hall would later develop  into a theory of implicit culture. In these  pages, we see theory in the flesh, taking a hundred  different human forms and engaging us in a lost  world, the West of the  thirties.

      West of the Thirties