
Face negotiation theory
We strive to maintain a favorable public image, and if we are unsuccessful, it can lead to
Face Negotiation Theory: Face-Maintenance Framework
Face negotiation theory is a theory conceived by Stella Ting-Toomey in 1985, to understand how people from different cultures manage rapport and disagreements. The theory posited "face", or self-image when communicating with others,
as a universal phenomenon that pervades across cultures. In conflicts,
one's face is threatened; and thus the person tends to save or restore
his or her face. This set of communicative behaviors, according to the
theory, is called "facework".
Since people frame the situated meaning of "face" and enact "facework"
differently from one culture to the next, the theory poses a
cross-cultural framework to examine facework negotiation. It is
important to note that the definition of face varies depending on the
people and their culture and the same can be said for the proficiency of
facework.
According to Ting-Toomey's theory, most cultural differences can be
divided by Eastern and Western cultures, and her theory accounts for
these differences.
Source: Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Face_negotiation_theory This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.