Title: Cross-Cultural Dialogues: 74 Brief Encounters With Cultural Difference (Paperback)by Craig Storti
Paperback: 150 pages
Publisher: Intercultural Press (April, 1994)
Language: English
ISBN: 1877864285
Product Dimensions: 9.0 x 6.2 x 0.5 inches
Amazon Reviews:
excellent, April 22, 2003
Reviewer: Kebbie Sebastian (VA, USA)
This was a riveting read. very insightful and helpful in understanding cultural differences. I read it to learn more about american culture and found it helpful. I also learnt about many other cultures too.
Great Training Tool, January 4, 2001
Reviewer: Daria I. Novak (Great Falls, VA United States)
As president of a cross-cultural training and consulting company, I have found this text extremely useful for providing our clients, corporate managers and executives, a quick, easy-to-read overview of the types of communication challenges that can arise in daily cross-cultural conversations. Typically, the reaction we get is "That just happened to me, but I didn't know what was going on at the time." At ERUdyne, we use the text on a regular basis. We recommend it to all our clients who are new to the global business environment, and to those who want to fine tune their skills for picking up the real message behind the words.
Storti's dialogues fascinating, March 31, 2000
Reviewer: A reader
I teach in a community college in a small town near the Mexican border and discovered in Storti's book insights that enabled me to avoid small cultural differences that can interfere with communication. My advanced composition class studies the topic of cross-cultural communication world wide, and Storti's book is one of the major resources I make available to them in the college library. The students are fascinated by this segment of the class and like Storti's dialogues a lot.
Excellent, December 11, 1999
Reviewer: Jennifer R. Narod (Falls Church, VA)
This book is a fun and fascinating read. Craig Storti is truly in tune with the subtleties, pitfalls and opportunities of cross-cultural dialogue. The book does not have an academic or burdensome tone; rather, it is simple to read and understand. I found it quite enjoyable, attempting to figure out (like a riddle), from each small example of a cross-cultural interaction, WHAT the "snags" or miscommunications of each scenario were. I also liked that Mr. Storti divided the book into different settings: social, workplace and business. As a student of conflict analysis and resolution, I have found (and will continue to find) this book extremely useful in my present and future work and interactions; however, anyone, from any walk of life, study, or profession should really read this book, as it would be very useful in our increasingly multi-cultural society, and our world, which is getting smaller and smaller all the time.