Metaphors of Culture
Here is a brief table that I created for use in the current edition of Interpersonal Messages to stimulate different ways of thinking about culture and also about metaphors. I thought it might be useful more generally in a variety of different courses/classrooms. These insights are taken from a variety of sources including Edward Hall's Beyond Culture; Geert Hofstede, Gert Jan Hofstede, and Michael Minkov's Cultures and Organizations: Software of the Mind; and the websites of Culture at Work and Culturally Teaching: Education across Cultures.
Seven Metaphors of Culture
| Metaphor | Metaphor�s Claim/assumption |
| Salad/Jelly beans | Like items in a salad or bag of jelly beans, cultures are individual; yet, they work together with other cultures to produce an even better combination. |
| Iceberg | Like the iceberg, only a small part of culture is visible; most of culture and its influences are hidden from easy inspection. |
| Tree | Like the tree, you only see the trunk, branches, and leaves but the root system, which gives the tree its structure and function, is hidden from view. |
| Melting pot | Cultures blend into one amalgam and lose their individuality. But, the blend is better than any one of the ingredients. |
| Software | Culture dictates what we do and don�t do much as does a software program. Out of awareness, people are programmed, to some extent, to think and behave by their culture. |
| Organism | Culture, like an organism, uses the environment (other cultures) to grow but maintains boundaries so its uniqueness is not destroyed. |
| Mosaic | Like a beautiful mosaic is made up of pieces of different shapes, sizes, and colors, so is culture; the whole, the combination, is more beautiful than any individual piece. |
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