Intercultural communication is a daily occurrence for most
people, as a result of transnational population flows and
globalized media. The contributions to this volume propose
reconceptualizations of orthodox accounts of intercultural
communication based on supposed national cultural characteristics.
They approach the subject from a variety of angles, including
intercultural communication training, the role of power in
intercultural negotiations, the linguistic situation in Europe, and
the conflict between nationalist and transnational discourses in
literature. The articles consider the need for a revision of the
notions of culture and communication given multicultural and
multilingual environments such as universities; the use of English
as a lingua franca in Europe; how collaborative discourse can
reshape power relations; the importance of social intelligence in
intercultural communication; cultural and linguistic influences on
conceptual metaphors and their translation; and the way Irish and
Galician women poets negotiate competing ideologies such as
nationalism, feminism, Celticism and Catholicism. This book was
published as a special issue of the European Journal of English
Studies.
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