Moving Beyond Essentialism: Cultivating EFL Learners’ Intercultural Communicative Competence through a Non-Essentialist Paradigm of Culture
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Date
2024
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Université de Tamenghasset
Abstract
The pace of change in today’s globalized world is unprecedented. Boundaries
between nations and cultures are increasingly blurred. This change requires resilient
and adaptable individuals with a heightened awareness of global dynamics. Thus,
foreign language education has shifted attention from traditional pedagogies
promoting linguistic competence to pedagogies training learners to be intercultural
competent communicators. Nonetheless, there is a hot debate on which paradigm of
culture to adopt when cultivating EFL learners’ intercultural competence: the
essentialist or non-essentialist paradigm. This paper is then an attempt to explore the
suitable cultural paradigm for promoting intercultural communicative competence in
EFL settings. Consequently, it is found that an intercultural pedagogy demands a
non-essentialist paradigm which views culture as a dynamic, complex, and fluid
entity, unlike the essentialist view which delimits culture to its national boundaries
causing national banalism, stereotypes, and generalizations.
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Keywords
Intercultural Pedagogy, Essentialist Paradigm, Non-Essentialist Paradigm, Intercultural Communicative Competence