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By collecting together scholarship that centralizes race and intercultural communication in order to interrogate the myths of colour-blindness and post-racialism, Race(ing) Intercultural Communication examines their manifestations in various discourses and mediums of communication. The contributions are at the forefront of theorizing about race, and its implications on intercultural communication, by examining (inter)national discourses, voices, and communities so as to envision alternate possibilities for co-existing socially. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of International and Intercultural Communication. …mehr

Produktbeschreibung
By collecting together scholarship that centralizes race and intercultural communication in order to interrogate the myths of colour-blindness and post-racialism, Race(ing) Intercultural Communication examines their manifestations in various discourses and mediums of communication. The contributions are at the forefront of theorizing about race, and its implications on intercultural communication, by examining (inter)national discourses, voices, and communities so as to envision alternate possibilities for co-existing socially. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of International and Intercultural Communication.


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Autorenporträt
Dreama G. Moon is a professor in the Communication Department at California State University, San Marcos, California, USA. Within a human rights framework, she studies the varied communicative processes by which relations of domination are constructed, negotiated, reproduced, and resisted, with special attention to race and white supremacy. Michelle A. Holling is an associate professor in the Communication Department at California State University, San Marcos, California, USA. From a critical rhetorical lens, she advances the study of Chican@ rhetoric, and examines the ways that racial-ethnic individuals rhetorically challenge reigning ideologies, systems, or representations that contribute to their continued marginalization.