TY - BOOK AU - Collinsworth,Eden TI - I stand corrected: how teaching Western manners in China became its own unforgettable lesson SN - 9780385538695 (hardcover) AV - HF5389 .C653 2014 U1 - 395.071/051 23 PY - 2014///] CY - New York PB - Nan A. Talese/Doubleday KW - Collinsworth, Eden. KW - BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Personal Memoirs KW - bisacsh KW - BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Business Etiquette KW - Business etiquette KW - Study and teaching KW - China KW - Businesspeople KW - Western countries KW - Social life and customs KW - Etiquette N1 - Includes bibliographical references (page 251) N2 - "A fascinating fusion of memoir, manners, and cultural history from a successful businesswoman well-versed in the unique challenges of working in contemporary China. During the course of her long and successful business career, no country has fascinated Eden Collinsworth more than China. After numerous business experiences that might best be called "unusual" by Western standards, she had a crucial insight: despite the growing status of China as a world economy and the unprecedented range of Chinese investments overseas, businessmen in mainland China--well-educated and speaking English--were fundamentally uncomfortable in the company of their Western counterparts. This realization spawned a Western etiquette guide for Chinese businessmen, which went on to be a huge best seller in China and formed the basis for new curriculum supported by the Chinese Ministry of Education. In I Stand Corrected, Collinsworth tells the story of the year she spent writing that book, creating a counterpart that both explains Chinese practices and reveals much about our own Western culture. She explores topics including the non-negotiable issue of personal hygiene; the rules of the handshake; making sense of foreigners; and that which is considered universally rude. She also scrutinizes some of the Western etiquette that has guided her own business career, one which has unfolded in predominately male company. At the same time, I Stand Corrected is a retrospective journey, a wry but self-effacing reflection on the peripatetic career she led while single-handedly raising her son. Like all parents, she didn't always have answers, and here she details the many, often ludicrous, attempts to strike a balance that was right for both of them"-- ER -