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Here's What Happens When You Say Something Ironic To An American

Erin Meyer, "The Culture Map"   

Here's What Happens When You Say Something Ironic To An American
Strategy2 min read

dubai international triathalon bike race bicycle

Francois Nel/Getty Images

Both Americans and British fall toward the low-context end of the Communicating scale (i.e., they speak more explicitly than most cultures), but the British speak more between the lines than Americans do, a tendency particularly apparent with British high-context humor.

Many British people are fond of delivering ironic or sarcastic jokes with a completely deadpan face. Unfortunately, this kind of humor is lost on many Americans; they may suspect the British person is joking but they don't dare laugh, just in case he is not.

As a result, the British often say that Americans "don't understand irony."

A more precise explanation, however, is that Americans are simply more low-context than the British. So when Americans make a joke, especially in a professional setting, they are likely to indicate clearly through explicit verbal or physical cues, "This is a joke" - something totally unnecessary when one British person speaking to another (in their higher-context culture, if you have to tell us it was a joke, then it wasn't worth the breath you used to tell it).

Alastair Murray, a British manager living in Dubai, offers this example:

I was participating in a long-distance bike race across the UAE desert with hundreds of participants. In order to be collegial, I took a turn riding in front of another biker in order to break the headwind for him and help him save a little energy. A stranger had recently done the same for me.

A little later the biker peddled up next to me and said in a thick American accent, "Thanks very much for your help!"

I replied, "Oh, sure! But I wouldn't have done it if I'd known you were American."

To someone British it would have been clear that this was a joke, and even a sort of gentle reaching-out of friendliness. But as I delivered it straight-faced and with a serious voice, the American didn't seem to get it. He rode next to me in silence, beginning to pull slightly to the side.

So then I thought about how often Americans say "just kidding" after a joke. So I gave it a go. I told him, "Oh, hey, just kidding!"

And he responded, "Oh! All right! Ha ha! That was a good one. Where are you from?"

Oh, gosh, I thought. . . . these literal Americans!

This excerpt was posted with permission from "The Culture Map: Breaking Through the Invisible Boundaries of Global Business" (2014) by INSEAD professor Erin Meyer, from PublicAffairs.

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