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Conference Paper: "I can't remember them ever not doing what I tell them!" Negotiating ‘upward’ refusals in multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong

Title"I can't remember them ever not doing what I tell them!" Negotiating ‘upward’ refusals in multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong
Authors
Issue Date2011
PublisherInternational Pragmatics Association.
Citation
The 12th International Pragmatics Conference (IPrA 2011), Manchester, UK., 3-8 July 2011. In Conference Abstracts, 2011, p. 321-322 How to Cite?
AbstractThis paper explores refusals in a range of multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong. Our particular focus is on how junior staff members, who are Hong Kong Chinese, manage refusals towards their superiors who are expatriates working and living in Hong Kong. Refusals are generally complex and potentially risky speech acts as they may threaten interlocutors’ face needs and challenge existing power relations and the status quo (Hayashi 1996; Daly et al. 2004). These issues of power and face are particularly crucial in asymmetrical relationships. Despite abundant research on refusals in a variety of contexts across cultures (e.g. Rubin 1983; Beebe et al. 1990), there is hardly any research on workplaces (with the exception of Daly et al.2004), let alone multicultural workplaces. This is particularly surprising considering that in these contexts members from different socio-cultural backgrounds on a daily basis manage culturally influenced expectations and assumptions of “doing” refusals. We use the framework of rapport management (Spencer-Oatey 2000) and draw on a corpus of authentic discourse collected in a wide range of multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong including small family owned businesses, SMEs, an NGO, as well as large international financial and consulting corporations. The data contains more than 80 hours of recorded interactions and samples of emails. In addition to these discourse data, the corpus also comprises semi-structured interviews with participants and a range of organisational documents which provide additional insights into the complexities of workplace discourse. Initial findings indicate – perhaps not surprisingly – that there are hardly any upward refusals in the spoken interactions. These observations seem to reinforce participants’ own perceptions as, for example, reflected in the comment of an expatriate leader from the UK who manages an IT company: “I can't remember them [his Chinese local team members] ever not doing what I tell them! Or at least, not agreeing to it”. Moreover, these observations seem to be in line with previous research that claims that in cultures of high power distance, such as Hong Kong, people tend not to question authority and to maintain and reinforce hierarchical relationships (Chee & West 2000). However, while these cultural practices, expectations and values may explain the lack of upward refusals in the spoken interactions, they are challenged to a certain extent by our findings of the emails sample where we identified considerably more refusals upwards – some of which are surprisingly direct and confrontational. These differences in the ways in which upward refusals are constructed and negotiated in different multicultural workplace contexts cannot only be explained by reference to interlocutors’ different socio-cultural backgrounds. Rather, a wide range of other factors, including the different media of communication and aspects of workplace culture, need to be considered in an attempt to understand how interlocutors negotiate issues of face, power and hierarchical relationships when “doing” refusalsupwards.
DescriptionContribution to the panel From Refusing to Schmoozing: Investigating Strategic Roadmaps for Negotiating Conflict and Rapport, organized by Boxer Diana
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/166877

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorSchnurr, Sen_US
dc.contributor.authorZayts, Oen_US
dc.date.accessioned2012-09-20T08:51:16Z-
dc.date.available2012-09-20T08:51:16Z-
dc.date.issued2011en_US
dc.identifier.citationThe 12th International Pragmatics Conference (IPrA 2011), Manchester, UK., 3-8 July 2011. In Conference Abstracts, 2011, p. 321-322en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/166877-
dc.descriptionContribution to the panel From Refusing to Schmoozing: Investigating Strategic Roadmaps for Negotiating Conflict and Rapport, organized by Boxer Diana-
dc.description.abstractThis paper explores refusals in a range of multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong. Our particular focus is on how junior staff members, who are Hong Kong Chinese, manage refusals towards their superiors who are expatriates working and living in Hong Kong. Refusals are generally complex and potentially risky speech acts as they may threaten interlocutors’ face needs and challenge existing power relations and the status quo (Hayashi 1996; Daly et al. 2004). These issues of power and face are particularly crucial in asymmetrical relationships. Despite abundant research on refusals in a variety of contexts across cultures (e.g. Rubin 1983; Beebe et al. 1990), there is hardly any research on workplaces (with the exception of Daly et al.2004), let alone multicultural workplaces. This is particularly surprising considering that in these contexts members from different socio-cultural backgrounds on a daily basis manage culturally influenced expectations and assumptions of “doing” refusals. We use the framework of rapport management (Spencer-Oatey 2000) and draw on a corpus of authentic discourse collected in a wide range of multicultural workplaces in Hong Kong including small family owned businesses, SMEs, an NGO, as well as large international financial and consulting corporations. The data contains more than 80 hours of recorded interactions and samples of emails. In addition to these discourse data, the corpus also comprises semi-structured interviews with participants and a range of organisational documents which provide additional insights into the complexities of workplace discourse. Initial findings indicate – perhaps not surprisingly – that there are hardly any upward refusals in the spoken interactions. These observations seem to reinforce participants’ own perceptions as, for example, reflected in the comment of an expatriate leader from the UK who manages an IT company: “I can't remember them [his Chinese local team members] ever not doing what I tell them! Or at least, not agreeing to it”. Moreover, these observations seem to be in line with previous research that claims that in cultures of high power distance, such as Hong Kong, people tend not to question authority and to maintain and reinforce hierarchical relationships (Chee & West 2000). However, while these cultural practices, expectations and values may explain the lack of upward refusals in the spoken interactions, they are challenged to a certain extent by our findings of the emails sample where we identified considerably more refusals upwards – some of which are surprisingly direct and confrontational. These differences in the ways in which upward refusals are constructed and negotiated in different multicultural workplace contexts cannot only be explained by reference to interlocutors’ different socio-cultural backgrounds. Rather, a wide range of other factors, including the different media of communication and aspects of workplace culture, need to be considered in an attempt to understand how interlocutors negotiate issues of face, power and hierarchical relationships when “doing” refusalsupwards.-
dc.languageengen_US
dc.publisherInternational Pragmatics Association.-
dc.relation.ispartofInternational Pragmatics Conference, IPrA 2011en_US
dc.title"I can't remember them ever not doing what I tell them!" Negotiating ‘upward’ refusals in multicultural workplaces in Hong Kongen_US
dc.typeConference_Paperen_US
dc.identifier.emailSchnurr, S: sschnurr@hkucc.hku.hken_US
dc.identifier.emailZayts, O: zayts@hkucc.hku.hk-
dc.identifier.authorityZayts, O=rp01211en_US
dc.description.naturelink_to_OA_fulltext-
dc.identifier.hkuros211093en_US
dc.identifier.spage321-
dc.identifier.epage322-
dc.publisher.placeUnited Kingdom-
dc.customcontrol.immutablesml 130417-

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