How is cultural identity accomplished interactively? What happens when different cultural identities contact one another? This book presents a series of papers, from classic essays to original expositions, which respond to these questions. The view of communication offered here -- rather than ignoring culture, or making it a variable in an equation -- is based on cultural patterns and situated communication practices, unveiling the multiplicity of factors involved in particular times and places. The contributors to this unusual volume represent a wide range of fields. Their equally diverse…mehr
How is cultural identity accomplished interactively? What happens when different cultural identities contact one another? This book presents a series of papers, from classic essays to original expositions, which respond to these questions. The view of communication offered here -- rather than ignoring culture, or making it a variable in an equation -- is based on cultural patterns and situated communication practices, unveiling the multiplicity of factors involved in particular times and places. The contributors to this unusual volume represent a wide range of fields. Their equally diverse offerings will serve to clarify cultural distinctiveness in some communication phenomena, and lay groundwork for the identification of cross-cultural generalities in others.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Contents: D. Carbaugh Introduction. D. Carbaugh Part I:Culture Talking About Itself.G. Philipsen Speaking "Like a Man" in Teamsterville: Culture Patterns of Role Enactment in an Urban Neighborhood. G. Philipsen Reflections on Speaking "Like a Man" in Teamsterville. J.L. Daniel G. Smitherman-Donaldson How I Got Over: Communication Dynamics in the Black Community. J.L. Daniel G. Smitherman-Donaldson How I Got Over and Continue to Do So in Our Mothers' Churches. D.L. Wieder S. Pratt On Being a Recognizable Indian Among Indians. D.L. Wieder S. Pratt On the Occasioned and Situated Character of Members' Questions and Answers: Reflections on the Question "Is He or She a Real Indian?" T. Katriel G. Philipsen "What We Need is Communication": "Communication" as a Cultural Category in Some American Speech. G. Philipsen Reflections on "Communication" as a Cultural Category In Some American Speech. T. Katriel 'Griping' as a Verbal Ritual in Some Israeli Discourse. T. Katriel Reflections on the Israeli 'Griping' Ritual. D. Carbaugh Communication Rules in Donahue Discourse. D. Carbaugh Part II:Intercultural Communication. K. Liberman Intercultural Communication in Central Australia. K. Liberman An Ethnomethodological Agenda in the Study of Intercultural Communication. T. Kochman Force Fields in Black and White Communication. T. Kochman Cultural Pluralism: Black and White Styles. J.K. Chick The Interactional Accomplishment of Discrimination in South Africa. J.K. Chick Reflections on Language Interaction and Context: Micro and Macro Issues. R. Scollon S. Wong-Scollon Athabaskan-English Interethnic Communication. S. Wong-Scollon R. Scollon Epilogue to "Athabaskan-English Interethnic Communication." D. Carbaugh Part III: Cross-Cultural Comparisons of Communication Phenomena. K. Basso "To Give Up on Words": Silence in the Western Apache Culture. C.A. Braithwaite Communicative Silence: A Cross-Cultural Study of Basso's Hypothesis. S.U. Philips Some Sources of Cultural Variability in the Regulation of Talk. S.U. Philips Epilogue to "Some Sources of Cultural Variability in the Regulation of Talk." J.R. Searle A Classification of Illocutionary Acts. M.Z. Rosaldo The Things We Do With Words: IIongot Speech Acts and Speech Act Theory in Philosophy. J.R. Searle Epilogue to the Taxonomy of Illocutionary Acts. D. Hymes Epilogue: To "The Things We Do With Words."
Contents: D. Carbaugh Introduction. D. Carbaugh Part I:Culture Talking About Itself.G. Philipsen Speaking "Like a Man" in Teamsterville: Culture Patterns of Role Enactment in an Urban Neighborhood. G. Philipsen Reflections on Speaking "Like a Man" in Teamsterville. J.L. Daniel G. Smitherman-Donaldson How I Got Over: Communication Dynamics in the Black Community. J.L. Daniel G. Smitherman-Donaldson How I Got Over and Continue to Do So in Our Mothers' Churches. D.L. Wieder S. Pratt On Being a Recognizable Indian Among Indians. D.L. Wieder S. Pratt On the Occasioned and Situated Character of Members' Questions and Answers: Reflections on the Question "Is He or She a Real Indian?" T. Katriel G. Philipsen "What We Need is Communication": "Communication" as a Cultural Category in Some American Speech. G. Philipsen Reflections on "Communication" as a Cultural Category In Some American Speech. T. Katriel 'Griping' as a Verbal Ritual in Some Israeli Discourse. T. Katriel Reflections on the Israeli 'Griping' Ritual. D. Carbaugh Communication Rules in Donahue Discourse. D. Carbaugh Part II:Intercultural Communication. K. Liberman Intercultural Communication in Central Australia. K. Liberman An Ethnomethodological Agenda in the Study of Intercultural Communication. T. Kochman Force Fields in Black and White Communication. T. Kochman Cultural Pluralism: Black and White Styles. J.K. Chick The Interactional Accomplishment of Discrimination in South Africa. J.K. Chick Reflections on Language Interaction and Context: Micro and Macro Issues. R. Scollon S. Wong-Scollon Athabaskan-English Interethnic Communication. S. Wong-Scollon R. Scollon Epilogue to "Athabaskan-English Interethnic Communication." D. Carbaugh Part III: Cross-Cultural Comparisons of Communication Phenomena. K. Basso "To Give Up on Words": Silence in the Western Apache Culture. C.A. Braithwaite Communicative Silence: A Cross-Cultural Study of Basso's Hypothesis. S.U. Philips Some Sources of Cultural Variability in the Regulation of Talk. S.U. Philips Epilogue to "Some Sources of Cultural Variability in the Regulation of Talk." J.R. Searle A Classification of Illocutionary Acts. M.Z. Rosaldo The Things We Do With Words: IIongot Speech Acts and Speech Act Theory in Philosophy. J.R. Searle Epilogue to the Taxonomy of Illocutionary Acts. D. Hymes Epilogue: To "The Things We Do With Words."
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