Debug: No search context available for navigation

Listening to the world : cultural issues in academic writing

Fox, Helen, author.
Urbana, Illinois : National Council of Teachers of English, [1994]

This book explores why students from other cultures often find it difficult to learn academic writing and understand its purpose in a U.S. university. The book discusses how these students' writing is influenced by cultures where people communicate indirectly and holistically, value the wisdom of the past, and downplay the individual in favor of the group. Drawing upon systematic conversations and interviews with students from Asia, Latin America, and Africa, the book looks at what happens to undergraduate and graduate students--some of them mid-career professionals who are published writers in their own countries--when they try to modify their writing and thinking styles to produce analytical papers in the Western context. The book addresses the difficulties on both sides with sustained and empathetic focus on underlying cultural differences, noting that the dominant communication style of the United States is highly valued "by only a tiny fraction of the world's peoples." (NKA)

Bibliographic Information


Format: Book
Author: Fox, Helen,
Subject: English language
Academic writing
Intercultural communication
Multicultural education
Language and culture
Publication Year:1994
Language:English
Published:Urbana, Illinois : National Council of Teachers of English, [1994]
ISBN:9780814129531
0814129536
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 145-154) and index.
Course: IFYP007

Availability at HKSYU Library


Location Call number Status
English Book (5/F) 808.0420711 FOX 1994 Available