| license | Apache-2.0 |
| name | intercultural-discourse |
| description | Cross-cultural communication frameworks for understanding discourse patterns across cultures |
| metadata | {"category":"Cognitive Science & Decision Making","tags":["intercultural","communication","discourse","cross-cultural","pragmatics"],"io-contract":{"kind":"deliverable","produces":[{"kind":"critique","description":"Multi-framework analysis of cross-cultural discourse identifying hidden breakdowns, power dynamics, and culturally-specific communication patterns that surface-level coding misses","format":"markdown"},{"kind":"refactor-plan","description":"Structured recommendations for reframing interaction analysis when initial single-framework results appear suspiciously clean or culturally misaligned","format":"markdown"},{"kind":"design-doc","description":"Decision framework documentation for selecting appropriate analytical approach (single vs. layered vs. emergent vs. foregrounded cultural analysis) based on context and power dynamics","format":"markdown"}]}} |
| allowed-tools | Read,Write,Edit,Glob,Grep |
SKILL.md — Intercultural Discourse Analysis & Multi-Perspectival Interpretation
DECISION POINTS
Framework Selection Matrix
When analyzing cross-cultural discourse, choose your approach:
Single Framework Analysis:
├─ If: Simple, low-stakes interaction with power symmetry
├─ If: Time-constrained preliminary analysis needed
└─ Use: Standard conversation analysis coding only
Layered Framework Analysis:
├─ If: Power asymmetry present (teacher/student, expert/novice)
├─ If: Cultural backgrounds differ significantly
├─ If: Previous single-framework analysis felt incomplete
└─ Use: Sequential application of 2-3 frameworks, preserve contradictions
Emergent Cultural Analysis:
├─ If: Patterns seem culturally specific but unclear which concepts apply
├─ If: Standard coding produces suspiciously clean results
└─ Use: Data-driven cultural pattern identification first, then framework application
Foregrounded Cultural Analysis:
├─ If: Specific cultural concept suspected (e.g., face-saving, hierarchy respect)
├─ If: Behavior looks like "failure" but participants seem comfortable
└─ Use: Apply cultural lens first, then check against other frameworks
Breakdown Detection Decision Tree
Observed smooth interaction →
├─ Low power distance context?
│ ├─ Yes → Likely genuine comprehension
│ └─ No → Test for hidden breakdown
└─ High power distance context?
├─ Check for minimal responses, quick agreements
├─ Look for topic avoidance patterns
└─ If present → Assume hidden breakdown until proven otherwise
Data Reuse vs. Recollection
Have existing relevant data? →
├─ Collected for different question?
│ ├─ Contextual notes preserved? → Revisit data
│ └─ Only transcripts remain? → Consider recollection
├─ Same question, different framework needed?
│ └─ Always revisit with new framework
└─ No existing data? → New collection required
FAILURE MODES
1. Smooth Interaction Fallacy
Detection Rule: If failure/repair rates < 5% in cross-cultural or hierarchical interaction
Symptoms: Clean transcripts, high agreement rates, minimal back-and-forth
Diagnosis: Mistaking compliance for comprehension; hidden breakdown present
Fix: Apply face-sensitive breakdown detection; look for acceptance without elaboration
2. Single-Lens Tunnel Vision
Detection Rule: If only one analytical framework applied and results feel definitive
Symptoms: Overly clean patterns, no analytical contradictions, quick conclusions
Diagnosis: Surface-level coding masquerading as complete analysis
Fix: Apply second framework; document tensions between interpretations
3. Anglocentric Default Bias
Detection Rule: If silence/minimal response coded as disengagement or failure
Symptoms: Pathologizing culturally appropriate communication styles
Diagnosis: Applying Western discourse norms as universal standards
Fix: Research participant cultural background; reframe "problems" as competent strategies
4. Evaluation Frame Contamination
Detection Rule: If interviewee responses are short, "correct," but lack elaboration
Symptoms: Participant optimizing for accuracy rather than disclosure
Diagnosis: Primary knower inversion not established; participant thinks they're being tested
Fix: Reframe elicitation to position participant as expert; signal data-gathering not evaluation
5. Premature Synthesis Collapse
Detection Rule: If multiple frameworks forced into single "master interpretation"
Symptoms: Analytical contradictions glossed over or ignored
Diagnosis: Treating frameworks as redundant routes to same truth
Fix: Document contradictions as findings; preserve multiple valid interpretations
WORKED EXAMPLES
Example 1: Thai Student Interview Analysis
Initial Single-Framework Analysis:
- Applied standard IRF (Initiation-Response-Feedback) coding
- Results: 89% "successful" exchanges, minimal repair sequences
- Interpretation: Good comprehension, effective communication
Red Flag Recognition:
- Responses consistently brief despite open questions
- No clarification requests despite complex topics
- High agreement rate with interviewer interpretations
Layered Reanalysis Process:
Layer 1 - Power Dynamics Check:
- Interviewer = native speaker teacher (high authority)
- Interviewee = L2 student (low status)
- → Primary knower inversion risk: HIGH
Layer 2 - Cultural Framework (Sam Ruam - Thai Composure):
- Reframed "minimal response" as competent composure maintenance
- Silence after questions = thoughtful consideration, not confusion
- Agreement patterns = face-saving, not necessarily comprehension
Layer 3 - Hidden Breakdown Detection:
- Searched for acceptance-without-elaboration patterns
- Found 23 instances where student agreed but couldn't expand
- Identified topic avoidance around cultural comparison questions
Final Multi-Lens Interpretation:
- Framework 1: Surface success (IRF coding)
- Framework 2: Cultural competence (sam ruam lens)
- Framework 3: Hidden comprehension gaps (breakdown analysis)
- Synthesis: All three valid; contradiction reveals interaction's complexity
Example 2: Medical Consultation Failure Detection
Scenario: Doctor-patient interaction, patient from hierarchical culture
Decision Path Applied:
- Power asymmetry? YES → Use layered approach
- Cultural difference? YES → Foreground cultural lens
- Smooth surface interaction? YES → Test for hidden breakdown
Step 1 - Surface Analysis:
- Patient says "yes doctor" frequently
- No explicit confusion signals
- Standard coding: successful information transfer
Step 2 - Hidden Breakdown Check:
- Searched for elaboration failures after "yes"
- Found patient couldn't explain treatment steps when asked
- Identified acceptance-without-comprehension pattern
Step 3 - Cultural Reframe:
- Patient's "yes" = respect acknowledgment, not comprehension signal
- Questioning doctor = face-threatening in patient's cultural frame
- Silence ≠ understanding; silence = appropriate deference
Outcome: Revealed systematic comprehension gaps hidden by culturally appropriate response patterns
Reference Files
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references/asymmetry-status-and-the-pre-determined-interaction.md — Examines how status asymmetry shapes what gets said, suppressed, and validated in structured interactions. Read when analyzing power dynamics in hierarchical discourse.
-
references/coding-systems-and-the-limits-of-surface-analysis.md — Explains why coding systems capture surface patterns but miss illocutionary intent and hidden breakdowns. Read when surface-level coding produces suspiciously clean results.
-
references/communicative-breakdown-as-primary-data.md — Inverts standard analysis: treats breakdown as informatively rich, not noise. Read when identifying what failure points reveal about topic sensitivity.
-
references/contingency-and-formality-in-structured-exchanges.md — Maps spectrum from casual to formal interaction; extends with contingency concept. Read when determining how exchange structure constrains participant options.
-
references/cultural-context-as-active-analytical-tool.md — Shifts context from background to active analytical layer. Read when deciding whether to apply cultural frameworks.
-
references/cultural-criteria-and-avoiding-anglocentric-evaluation.md — Documents Anglocentric bias in Western discourse analysis frameworks. Read when evaluating silence, minimal response, or elaboration patterns.
-
references/emergent-research-and-data-revisitation.md — Establishes data revisitation as principled strategy, not planning failure. Read when considering whether to reanalyze existing transcripts with new frameworks.
-
references/hidden-breakdown-and-face-sensitive-communication.md — Explains why high power-distance contexts hide breakdowns from surface coding. Read when analyzing interactions where participants seem comfortable despite apparent misalignment.
-
references/layers-of-insight-as-analytical-methodology.md — Demonstrates multi-framework depth through worked example (IRF + moves/acts + cultural criteria). Read when applying layered framework analysis.
-
references/layers-of-insight-multi-tool-interpretation.md — Methodological stance for using multiple frameworks simultaneously without premature synthesis. Read when managing contradictions between analytical frameworks.
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references/multi-purpose-data-and-the-ethics-of-inference.md — Addresses ethical tension when data collected for one purpose is reanalyzed for another. Read when revisiting interview data for discourse patterns beyond original consent scope.
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references/primary-knower-inversion-and-role-contamination.md — Analyzes how research interviews invert teacher-student primary knower roles, affecting response quality. Read when assessing reliability of participant self-reports in asymmetric contexts.
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references/repair-sequences-as-diagnostic-windows.md — Treats repair as diagnostic of interaction quality, not noise. Read when analyzing where and how breakdown occurs.
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references/surface-coding-vs-illocutionary-intent.md — Documents systematic gap between surface features and actual intent in cross-cultural discourse. Read when interpreting positive responses that may mask false comprehension.
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references/the-methodology-of-revisiting-data.md — Explains how new analytical tools make previously analyzed data yield different insights. Read when planning data revisitation with emergent frameworks.
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references/the-researcher-as-instrument-and-source-of-bias.md — Examines researcher influence on interview data and decision-making bias. Read when assessing how analyst positionality shapes findings.
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references/the-semi-structured-approach-to-complex-inquiry.md — Contrasts semi-structured flexibility with fully-structured reproducibility trade-offs. Read when deciding whether to follow rigid protocol or adapt to emerging patterns.
QUALITY GATES
Analysis complete when ALL conditions met:
NOT-FOR BOUNDARIES
This skill is NOT for:
- Real-time conversation management → Use
active-listening or cultural-sensitivity for live interaction
- Simple same-culture exchanges → Use
conversation-analysis for basic discourse patterns
- Crisis communication → Use
crisis-communication for urgent clarity needs
- Rapid assessment → Use
quick-cultural-scan for fast cultural context checks
- Therapeutic/counseling contexts → Use
therapeutic-communication for healing-focused dialogue
- Legal/formal proceedings → Use
formal-discourse-analysis for institutional talk
- Market research interviews → Use
interview-methodology for commercial contexts
Delegate when:
- Time pressure requires immediate decisions (use rapid assessment tools)
- Only surface-level patterns needed (use basic conversation analysis)
- Cultural expertise beyond your knowledge required (consult cultural specialists)
- Therapeutic goals primary (route to counseling professionals)
- Legal implications present (route to institutional discourse experts)
Complexity threshold: If interaction involves fewer than 3 of these factors, use simpler tools:
- Cultural differences
- Power asymmetries
- Hidden breakdown risk
- Multiple competing interpretations
- Face-sensitive communication norms