Difference between revisions of "Template:Introduction - I have never met anyone who understood Russians - Collectivism versus Individualism."
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− | : Russians appreciate the casual, direct, and often blunt American way of speaking, which they liken to their own — without pretense and different from the West European manner, which they find too formal, indirect, and less sincere. Yet Russians, despite their traditional suspicion of foreigners, show heartfelt hospitality to visitors from abroad, a trait they share with Americans.<ref>{{r}}</ref> | + | :: Russians appreciate the casual, direct, and often blunt American way of speaking, which they liken to their own — without pretense and different from the West European manner, which they find too formal, indirect, and less sincere. Yet Russians, despite their traditional suspicion of foreigners, show heartfelt hospitality to visitors from abroad, a trait they share with Americans.<ref>{{r}}</ref> |
<big><center>'''The deeper differences between Russians and Americans'''</center></big> | <big><center>'''The deeper differences between Russians and Americans'''</center></big> |
Revision as of 10:15, 19 November 2020
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“Don't bring your own rules into a strange monastery” (В чужой монастырь со своим уставом не ходят)[1] MANY AMERICANS have returned from a first visit to Russia exclaiming, "I don’t understand why we have had such difficulties with the Russians. They’re just like us." Subsequent visits, and a closer look, will reveal that Russians and Americans do indeed have stark differences. This book will seek to explain those differences and to help Americans understand why Russians behave like Russians. In the process, American readers may also learn why they behave like Americans. After all, as one sociologist explained, “To know one country is to know none”.[2] The surface similarities between Russians and Americans are readily apparent:
In Russia there is the desire “to find the balance between the conflicting outlooks of Europe and Asia, between Western claims to personal freedom and Oriental insistence on the integration of the individual into the community.” --Nicolas Zernov (1898-1980), Russian Orthodox theologian.[4]
The topic of collectivism will be discussed in ##[chapter]##. |
- ↑ Famous Russian idiom. Louis Menashe. (2014). Moscow Believes in Tears: Russians and Their Movies. New Academia Publishing.
- ↑ Seymour Martin Lipset (1922–2006), Sociologist.
- ↑ Richmond, Yale. (2008). From Nyet to Da: Understanding the New Russia. Nicholas Brealey Publishing.
- ↑ Nicolas Zernov. (1978). The Russians and Their Church (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press. 176.
- ↑ Hofstede Insights, Country Comparison: USA. https://www.hofstede-insights.com/country-comparison/the-usa/
- ↑ Hofstede Insights, Country Comparison: Russia. https://www.hofstede-insights.com/country-comparison/russia/
- ↑ Realo, Anu; Allik, Jüri. April 1999. A Cross-Cultural Study of Collectivism: A Comparison of American, Estonian, and Russian Students. The Journal of Social Psychology 139(2):133-142. DOI: 10.1080/00224549909598367 http://universitypublications.net/ijas/0705/pdf/H4V1015.pdf