TY - JOUR
T1 - Storytelling and Cultural Learning
T2 - An Expatriate Manager's Narratives of Collaboration Challenges in a Multicultural Business Setting
AU - Wilczewski, Michał
AU - Søderberg, Anne-Marie
AU - Gut, Arkadiusz
PY - 2019/6
Y1 - 2019/6
N2 - This paper focuses on cultural learning processes in an international business context. The empirical material is an in-depth narrative interview with a European expatriate manager who emplots challenging cultural encounters in an Asian subsidiary of a Western European multinational company. We seek turning points and discoveries in her stories to show how and what she learned from her critical incidents. We found that the new business and cultural context posed a huge challenge during the early stages of her assignment and that prior (explicit) knowledge and international experience did not ensure smooth collaborations. Successful collaborations required creating new context-specific (tacit) knowledge embedded in organizational culture and locals' behaviors. We found that extrapolating from social interactions led to cultural misinterpretations and inhibited cross-cultural interactions and learning, but continued interactions led to better understandings of cultural others' behaviors as their attributions could be renegotiated. Moreover, we found transformative potential of storytelling for expatriate post-experiential learning. We contribute methodologically to the narrative approach in cross-cultural research. We found that collecting stories by the interviewer who shares a nationality, language, and culture with the interviewee may impose an ethnocentric lens on the experiences related and limit the interviewee's reflection on cross-cultural communication and collaboration.
AB - This paper focuses on cultural learning processes in an international business context. The empirical material is an in-depth narrative interview with a European expatriate manager who emplots challenging cultural encounters in an Asian subsidiary of a Western European multinational company. We seek turning points and discoveries in her stories to show how and what she learned from her critical incidents. We found that the new business and cultural context posed a huge challenge during the early stages of her assignment and that prior (explicit) knowledge and international experience did not ensure smooth collaborations. Successful collaborations required creating new context-specific (tacit) knowledge embedded in organizational culture and locals' behaviors. We found that extrapolating from social interactions led to cultural misinterpretations and inhibited cross-cultural interactions and learning, but continued interactions led to better understandings of cultural others' behaviors as their attributions could be renegotiated. Moreover, we found transformative potential of storytelling for expatriate post-experiential learning. We contribute methodologically to the narrative approach in cross-cultural research. We found that collecting stories by the interviewer who shares a nationality, language, and culture with the interviewee may impose an ethnocentric lens on the experiences related and limit the interviewee's reflection on cross-cultural communication and collaboration.
KW - Cultural learning
KW - Cross-cultural collaboration
KW - In-depth interview
KW - Narrative analysis
KW - Expatriate
KW - Multinational company
KW - Cultural learning
KW - Cross-cultural collaboration
KW - In-depth interview
KW - Narrative analysis
KW - Expatriate
KW - Multinational company
U2 - 10.1016/j.lcsi.2019.04.007
DO - 10.1016/j.lcsi.2019.04.007
M3 - Journal article
SN - 2210-6561
VL - 21
SP - 362
EP - 377
JO - Learning, Culture and Social Interaction
JF - Learning, Culture and Social Interaction
ER -