Communication Yearbook 17
Herausgeber: Deetz, Stanley
Communication Yearbook 17
Herausgeber: Deetz, Stanley
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Divided into four sections, Communication Yearbook 17 focuses on interpersonal interaction, especially the constitutive processes within everyday communication, and is intended to complement the mass media focus of Communication Yearbooks 15 and 16. The second section focuses on message characteristics and what messages do in interaction. Section III considers value and policy issues in light of the ubiquitous nature of communication media and cultural pluralism. The final section discusses the future of communication studies and its potential social contribution. Commentaries on each chapter…mehr
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Divided into four sections, Communication Yearbook 17 focuses on interpersonal interaction, especially the constitutive processes within everyday communication, and is intended to complement the mass media focus of Communication Yearbooks 15 and 16. The second section focuses on message characteristics and what messages do in interaction. Section III considers value and policy issues in light of the ubiquitous nature of communication media and cultural pluralism. The final section discusses the future of communication studies and its potential social contribution. Commentaries on each chapter provide alternative perspectives ont he state of current research, extend issues of significance and help engage the reader in the contemporary debates of each area.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 644
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Februar 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 918g
- ISBN-13: 9781032243177
- ISBN-10: 1032243171
- Artikelnr.: 62994920
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 644
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Februar 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 918g
- ISBN-13: 9781032243177
- ISBN-10: 1032243171
- Artikelnr.: 62994920
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Stanley Deetz
Section 1: Communication and Identity: Construction of the Personal and the
Social 1. Social Construction: Knowledge, Self, Others, and Continuing the
Conversation John Shotter and Kenneth J. Gergen Commentaries: Recovering
Agency W. Burnett Pearce Social Constructionism and Communication Studies:
Hearing the Conversation But Losing the Dialogue Hugh Willmott 2. Is There
Still A Problem About the Self? Rom Harré Commentaries: Relationally
Engendered Selves Hartmut B. Mokros and Margaret A. Carr Discursive
Practice and Legitimation of the Polymorphous Self Martha Cooper and Anne
Gravel 3. Culture, Ideology, and Interpersonal Communication Research
Kristine L. Fitch Commentaries: The Problem With Disempowering Ideology
John W. Lannamann The Contested Spaces of Cultural Dialogue Mark Neumann
4. Personhood, Positioning, and Cultural Pragmatics: American Dignity in
Cross-Cultural Perspective Donald Carbaugh Commentary: Recovering History
and Conflict Gordon Nakagawa 5. Narratives of Individual and Organizational
Identities Barbara Czarniawska-Joerges Commentaries: Articulating Identity
in An Organizational Age Lars Thøger Christensen and George Cheney
Organizational Narratives and the Person/Identity Distinction Barbara
Levitt and Clifford Nass 6. Communication and Interdependence in Democratic
Organizations Teresa M. Harrison Commentaries: Dialogue as Democratic
Discourse: Affirming Harrison Eric M. Eisenberg "Wego" Comes in Several
Varieties and is Not Simple William I. Gorden Section 2: Taking Messages
Seriously 7. Discourse Features and Message Comprehension Diane M.
Badzinski and Mary M. Gill Commentary: Codes and Pragmatic Comprehension
Donald G. Ellis 8. Embodied Health and Constitutive Communication: Toward
an Authentic Conceptualization of Health Communication Eric G. Zook
Commentary: An Invitation to Leap from a Trinitarian Ontology in Health
Communication Research to a Spiritually Inclusive Quatrain Maria Cristina
González 9. Once More, With Feeling: Reconsidering the Role of Emotion in
Work Vincent R. Waldron Commentary: Is Emotional Expression Repression
Oppression? Myths of Organizational Affective Regulation Charles Conrad
and Kim Witte Section 3: Media, Culture, and Diversity 10. Does TV Belong
in the Classroom? Cognitive Consequences of Visual "Literacy" Paul Messaris
Commentaries: Pedagogical Issues in the U.S Media Education Renée Hobbs
Coming to Terms With Television Aimée Dorr 11. Market Censorship Revisited:
Press Freedom, Journalistic Practices, and the Emerging World Order Sue
Curry Jansen Commentary: Communication Technology as a Metaphor of Power
John J. Pauly 12. Interethnic Communication: The Context and the Behaviour
Young Yun Kim Commentaries: Deconstructing the "Big Picture": Perspectives
and Layers of Interethnic Communication Richard Clément and Howard Giles
Interethnic Communication and Cross-Paradigm Borrowing: A Disciplinary
Response Vernon E. Cronen Section 4: Editor's Postscript 13. Future of the
Discipline: The Challenges, the Research, and the Social Contribution
Stanley A. Deetz
Social 1. Social Construction: Knowledge, Self, Others, and Continuing the
Conversation John Shotter and Kenneth J. Gergen Commentaries: Recovering
Agency W. Burnett Pearce Social Constructionism and Communication Studies:
Hearing the Conversation But Losing the Dialogue Hugh Willmott 2. Is There
Still A Problem About the Self? Rom Harré Commentaries: Relationally
Engendered Selves Hartmut B. Mokros and Margaret A. Carr Discursive
Practice and Legitimation of the Polymorphous Self Martha Cooper and Anne
Gravel 3. Culture, Ideology, and Interpersonal Communication Research
Kristine L. Fitch Commentaries: The Problem With Disempowering Ideology
John W. Lannamann The Contested Spaces of Cultural Dialogue Mark Neumann
4. Personhood, Positioning, and Cultural Pragmatics: American Dignity in
Cross-Cultural Perspective Donald Carbaugh Commentary: Recovering History
and Conflict Gordon Nakagawa 5. Narratives of Individual and Organizational
Identities Barbara Czarniawska-Joerges Commentaries: Articulating Identity
in An Organizational Age Lars Thøger Christensen and George Cheney
Organizational Narratives and the Person/Identity Distinction Barbara
Levitt and Clifford Nass 6. Communication and Interdependence in Democratic
Organizations Teresa M. Harrison Commentaries: Dialogue as Democratic
Discourse: Affirming Harrison Eric M. Eisenberg "Wego" Comes in Several
Varieties and is Not Simple William I. Gorden Section 2: Taking Messages
Seriously 7. Discourse Features and Message Comprehension Diane M.
Badzinski and Mary M. Gill Commentary: Codes and Pragmatic Comprehension
Donald G. Ellis 8. Embodied Health and Constitutive Communication: Toward
an Authentic Conceptualization of Health Communication Eric G. Zook
Commentary: An Invitation to Leap from a Trinitarian Ontology in Health
Communication Research to a Spiritually Inclusive Quatrain Maria Cristina
González 9. Once More, With Feeling: Reconsidering the Role of Emotion in
Work Vincent R. Waldron Commentary: Is Emotional Expression Repression
Oppression? Myths of Organizational Affective Regulation Charles Conrad
and Kim Witte Section 3: Media, Culture, and Diversity 10. Does TV Belong
in the Classroom? Cognitive Consequences of Visual "Literacy" Paul Messaris
Commentaries: Pedagogical Issues in the U.S Media Education Renée Hobbs
Coming to Terms With Television Aimée Dorr 11. Market Censorship Revisited:
Press Freedom, Journalistic Practices, and the Emerging World Order Sue
Curry Jansen Commentary: Communication Technology as a Metaphor of Power
John J. Pauly 12. Interethnic Communication: The Context and the Behaviour
Young Yun Kim Commentaries: Deconstructing the "Big Picture": Perspectives
and Layers of Interethnic Communication Richard Clément and Howard Giles
Interethnic Communication and Cross-Paradigm Borrowing: A Disciplinary
Response Vernon E. Cronen Section 4: Editor's Postscript 13. Future of the
Discipline: The Challenges, the Research, and the Social Contribution
Stanley A. Deetz
Section 1: Communication and Identity: Construction of the Personal and the
Social 1. Social Construction: Knowledge, Self, Others, and Continuing the
Conversation John Shotter and Kenneth J. Gergen Commentaries: Recovering
Agency W. Burnett Pearce Social Constructionism and Communication Studies:
Hearing the Conversation But Losing the Dialogue Hugh Willmott 2. Is There
Still A Problem About the Self? Rom Harré Commentaries: Relationally
Engendered Selves Hartmut B. Mokros and Margaret A. Carr Discursive
Practice and Legitimation of the Polymorphous Self Martha Cooper and Anne
Gravel 3. Culture, Ideology, and Interpersonal Communication Research
Kristine L. Fitch Commentaries: The Problem With Disempowering Ideology
John W. Lannamann The Contested Spaces of Cultural Dialogue Mark Neumann
4. Personhood, Positioning, and Cultural Pragmatics: American Dignity in
Cross-Cultural Perspective Donald Carbaugh Commentary: Recovering History
and Conflict Gordon Nakagawa 5. Narratives of Individual and Organizational
Identities Barbara Czarniawska-Joerges Commentaries: Articulating Identity
in An Organizational Age Lars Thøger Christensen and George Cheney
Organizational Narratives and the Person/Identity Distinction Barbara
Levitt and Clifford Nass 6. Communication and Interdependence in Democratic
Organizations Teresa M. Harrison Commentaries: Dialogue as Democratic
Discourse: Affirming Harrison Eric M. Eisenberg "Wego" Comes in Several
Varieties and is Not Simple William I. Gorden Section 2: Taking Messages
Seriously 7. Discourse Features and Message Comprehension Diane M.
Badzinski and Mary M. Gill Commentary: Codes and Pragmatic Comprehension
Donald G. Ellis 8. Embodied Health and Constitutive Communication: Toward
an Authentic Conceptualization of Health Communication Eric G. Zook
Commentary: An Invitation to Leap from a Trinitarian Ontology in Health
Communication Research to a Spiritually Inclusive Quatrain Maria Cristina
González 9. Once More, With Feeling: Reconsidering the Role of Emotion in
Work Vincent R. Waldron Commentary: Is Emotional Expression Repression
Oppression? Myths of Organizational Affective Regulation Charles Conrad
and Kim Witte Section 3: Media, Culture, and Diversity 10. Does TV Belong
in the Classroom? Cognitive Consequences of Visual "Literacy" Paul Messaris
Commentaries: Pedagogical Issues in the U.S Media Education Renée Hobbs
Coming to Terms With Television Aimée Dorr 11. Market Censorship Revisited:
Press Freedom, Journalistic Practices, and the Emerging World Order Sue
Curry Jansen Commentary: Communication Technology as a Metaphor of Power
John J. Pauly 12. Interethnic Communication: The Context and the Behaviour
Young Yun Kim Commentaries: Deconstructing the "Big Picture": Perspectives
and Layers of Interethnic Communication Richard Clément and Howard Giles
Interethnic Communication and Cross-Paradigm Borrowing: A Disciplinary
Response Vernon E. Cronen Section 4: Editor's Postscript 13. Future of the
Discipline: The Challenges, the Research, and the Social Contribution
Stanley A. Deetz
Social 1. Social Construction: Knowledge, Self, Others, and Continuing the
Conversation John Shotter and Kenneth J. Gergen Commentaries: Recovering
Agency W. Burnett Pearce Social Constructionism and Communication Studies:
Hearing the Conversation But Losing the Dialogue Hugh Willmott 2. Is There
Still A Problem About the Self? Rom Harré Commentaries: Relationally
Engendered Selves Hartmut B. Mokros and Margaret A. Carr Discursive
Practice and Legitimation of the Polymorphous Self Martha Cooper and Anne
Gravel 3. Culture, Ideology, and Interpersonal Communication Research
Kristine L. Fitch Commentaries: The Problem With Disempowering Ideology
John W. Lannamann The Contested Spaces of Cultural Dialogue Mark Neumann
4. Personhood, Positioning, and Cultural Pragmatics: American Dignity in
Cross-Cultural Perspective Donald Carbaugh Commentary: Recovering History
and Conflict Gordon Nakagawa 5. Narratives of Individual and Organizational
Identities Barbara Czarniawska-Joerges Commentaries: Articulating Identity
in An Organizational Age Lars Thøger Christensen and George Cheney
Organizational Narratives and the Person/Identity Distinction Barbara
Levitt and Clifford Nass 6. Communication and Interdependence in Democratic
Organizations Teresa M. Harrison Commentaries: Dialogue as Democratic
Discourse: Affirming Harrison Eric M. Eisenberg "Wego" Comes in Several
Varieties and is Not Simple William I. Gorden Section 2: Taking Messages
Seriously 7. Discourse Features and Message Comprehension Diane M.
Badzinski and Mary M. Gill Commentary: Codes and Pragmatic Comprehension
Donald G. Ellis 8. Embodied Health and Constitutive Communication: Toward
an Authentic Conceptualization of Health Communication Eric G. Zook
Commentary: An Invitation to Leap from a Trinitarian Ontology in Health
Communication Research to a Spiritually Inclusive Quatrain Maria Cristina
González 9. Once More, With Feeling: Reconsidering the Role of Emotion in
Work Vincent R. Waldron Commentary: Is Emotional Expression Repression
Oppression? Myths of Organizational Affective Regulation Charles Conrad
and Kim Witte Section 3: Media, Culture, and Diversity 10. Does TV Belong
in the Classroom? Cognitive Consequences of Visual "Literacy" Paul Messaris
Commentaries: Pedagogical Issues in the U.S Media Education Renée Hobbs
Coming to Terms With Television Aimée Dorr 11. Market Censorship Revisited:
Press Freedom, Journalistic Practices, and the Emerging World Order Sue
Curry Jansen Commentary: Communication Technology as a Metaphor of Power
John J. Pauly 12. Interethnic Communication: The Context and the Behaviour
Young Yun Kim Commentaries: Deconstructing the "Big Picture": Perspectives
and Layers of Interethnic Communication Richard Clément and Howard Giles
Interethnic Communication and Cross-Paradigm Borrowing: A Disciplinary
Response Vernon E. Cronen Section 4: Editor's Postscript 13. Future of the
Discipline: The Challenges, the Research, and the Social Contribution
Stanley A. Deetz