(Inter)cultural Communication & Nonverbal Communication (general concept)
CULTURE & LANGUAGE · LESSON 08 A Reflection on (Inter)cultural Communication & Nonverbal Communication JUNE 2026 · When I first arrived in Japan from France, I thought communication was mostly about language. Speak the words, get the message across. Simple enough. But Japan challenged that assumption almost immediately because here, so much is said without a single word. (Inter)cultural communication, as scholars like Edward T. Hall have explored, is not just about verbal exchange. In The Silent Language (1959), Hall argues that culture itself is a form of communication, operating through space, time, gestures, and silence. In France, we tend to be expressive... raised eyebrows, open hands, dramatic sighs are all part of the conversation. In Japan, I noticed that the same emotional range is conveyed through subtler signals: a slight bow, a pause, a carefully neutral face. 間 MA — JAPANESE CONCEPT The meaningful use of empty space and silence. It has no real equi...