The Experience of Human Communication approaches everyday communication as a philosophical and psychological matter. Using insights from Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger, and Foucault, Frank Macke stresses that human communication-and with it, the human body-is, first and foremost, a relational phenomenon involving friends and family.
The Experience of Human Communication approaches everyday communication as a philosophical and psychological matter. Using insights from Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger, and Foucault, Frank Macke stresses that human communication-and with it, the human body-is, first and foremost, a relational phenomenon involving friends and family.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
The Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Series in Communication Studies
Acknowledgments Chapter One: Introduction: The Experience of Human Communication as a Threshold of Relational Consciousness Chapter Two: Therapy, Vulnerability, and Feeling in the Interstices of Embodied Expression: An Explication of Human Communicative Experience Chapter Three: The Mirrored Body: Phenomenological Reflections on the Visual Experience of the Reflected Self Chapter Four: On Contact: The Phatic Function of Communication Chapter Five: Body, Liquidity, and Flesh: Bachelard, Merleau-Ponty, and the Elements of Interpersonal Communication Chapter Six: The Diabolical Parable and the Devil in Speech Chapter Seven: Identity, Intimacy, and Eroticism: Deception, Sin, and the Existential Bargain of Adolescent Embodiment Chapter Eight: An Archaeology of Gender and a Theory of Communication Chapter Nine: The Flesh of Human Communicative Embodiment and the Game of Intimacy Chapter Ten: The Dream and the Self: Consciousness, Identity, the Sign, and the Image Chapter Eleven: Conclusion: The Dawning of Communicology Bibliography Index
Acknowledgments Chapter One: Introduction: The Experience of Human Communication as a Threshold of Relational Consciousness Chapter Two: Therapy, Vulnerability, and Feeling in the Interstices of Embodied Expression: An Explication of Human Communicative Experience Chapter Three: The Mirrored Body: Phenomenological Reflections on the Visual Experience of the Reflected Self Chapter Four: On Contact: The Phatic Function of Communication Chapter Five: Body, Liquidity, and Flesh: Bachelard, Merleau-Ponty, and the Elements of Interpersonal Communication Chapter Six: The Diabolical Parable and the Devil in Speech Chapter Seven: Identity, Intimacy, and Eroticism: Deception, Sin, and the Existential Bargain of Adolescent Embodiment Chapter Eight: An Archaeology of Gender and a Theory of Communication Chapter Nine: The Flesh of Human Communicative Embodiment and the Game of Intimacy Chapter Ten: The Dream and the Self: Consciousness, Identity, the Sign, and the Image Chapter Eleven: Conclusion: The Dawning of Communicology Bibliography Index
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