interculturation

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English

Etymology

From inter- +‎ culture +‎ -ation.

Noun

interculturation (countable and uncountable, plural interculturations)

  1. The process by which distinct cultures that come into contact mutually influence and alter each other.
    • 2008, Narmala Halstead, Eric Hirsch, Judith Okely, Knowing how to Know: Fieldwork and the Ethnographic Present, page 187:
      The dual processes of acculturation and interculturation are constitutive of the 'creative ambivalence' characterising the behaviour of Caribbean peoples.
    • 2015, Pamela Couture, Robert Mager, Pamela McCarroll, Complex Identities in a Shifting World: One God, Many Stories, page 175:
      Terms such as "inculturation," "localization," "contextualization," or "indigenization" of theology (Schreiter 1985, 1) are used for interculturation of faith, but many Indigenous people find these terms, including inculturation, suggestive of colonialist attitudes exerting "power over" the process.
    • 2017, Francis Chia-Hui Lin, Architectural Theorisations and Phenomena in Asia, page 194:
      Without consideration of the colony character of Malaysia in terms of its consistent interculturation with imperial and neoimperial power, multiplicity can easily be mistheorised as representing Saidian Orientalism or expatriates—such theorisations can be drawn from superficial reinterpretations of Taiwan's Tenryuubito phenomenon in recent years and Japan's Datsu-A Ron statement during the Meiji period.