Kory Floyd, Paul Schrodt, Larry A. Erbert, Kristina M. Scharp
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Exploring Communication Theory
Making Sense of Us
Kory Floyd, Paul Schrodt, Larry A. Erbert, Kristina M. Scharp
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Ăber dieses Buch
Continuing its engaging and readable approach, this second edition presents an overview of the major theories within the discipline of communication studies inclusive of the three major paradigms of social scientific, interpretive, and critical.
Each member of the author team writes from his or her area of expertise, giving readers further insight into how the theory is applied to research within communication studies. With extensive pedagogical features, the text underscores key concepts and links them to students' own communication studies scholarship and everyday lives. Key updates for this edition include updated examples and discussions around theories to give students a deeper understanding; explorations of Black Lives Matter and intersectionality; and new pedagogical features in line with Bloom's taxonomy.
This book is ideal as a core text for undergraduate courses in communication theory.
Online resources also accompany the text: an instructor manual, test bank, lecture slides, and author introduction videos. Please visit www.routledge.com/9781032015194 to access the materials.
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What is communication? When did scholars first begin to think about and attempt to explain how people communicate? How have different views of communication changed over time? And today, what types of questions are communication scholars attempting to address? In this chapter, we will conceptualize communication, briefly trace the historical development of communication as a distinct field of inquiry, and consider how understanding communication theory can answer important questions and enhance quality of life. After reading this chapter, you will be able to:
Understand the nature of communication.
Distinguish primary traditions underlying the communication discipline.
Compare and contrast humanistic and social scientific approaches to studying communication.
Describe the contemporary discipline of communication and its current and future directions.
Appreciate how good communication enhances the quality of life.
INQUIRING MINDS WANT TO KNOW
On January 21, 2020, a Washington state resident who had recently returned from Wuhan, China, became the first person in the United States with a confirmed case of the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19). Two weeks later, the United States declared a public health emergency and on March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic, one that would forever change public health and how people relate to others on a daily basis.1 From news reports about the virus, testing protocols, and vaccinations, to social distancing, wearing masks, and contact tracing, to the political and economic fallout for individuals, families, businesses, and global economies, the COVID-19 pandemic has created a host of questions about how to communicate different kinds of information in different contexts.
Whether you closely followed the ongoing development of the pandemic or grew weary of it and lost interest over time, you may have asked a variety of questions as you made sense of it all. For example, you may have wondered how changing to online education and Zoom classes would affect how your professors teach and how you learn. Perhaps you considered how journalists were reporting information related to the pandemic and questioned whether you could trust the information you read. Or maybe you wondered why various family members and friends responded so differently to public health messages as vaccinations began to roll out. As most people do when theyâre confused and uncertain, you search for a reason, an explanation for why people act the way that they do in the midst of a global pandemic.
You search, that is, for a communication theory.
We know the feeling. Each of usâKory, Paul, Larry, and Kristinaâwants to understand why people communicate the way they do. Thatâs what led us to take communication courses, as you are doing now, and eventually to teach and study the many ways in which people interact. One lesson weâve learned is that communication is often more complex than it appears. You may easily be able to come up with reasons why some people trust public health officials enough to act on their recommendation to get vaccinated for COVID-19 and others do not, but does your explanation take the right factors into consideration? Does it ignore causes that are relevant or take account of factors that donât really matter?
Those are the types of questions that communication scholars deal with every day. Most communication behaviors can be explained in more than one way, and it is the job of communication scholarsâsuch as the ones weâll introduce you to in this bookâto examine which explanations are the most useful.
Before we start looking at communication theories, letâs take some time to talk about communication itself. In this chapter, weâll discuss the characteristics that communication behaviors share. Then weâll explore the communication discipline by looking at our past, our present, and our future. We believe having that background will be useful as you begin your study of communication theories.
HOW WE THINK ABOUT COMMUNICATION
Although you communicate virtually every day of your life, you probably donât think very often about what communication is, exactly. If you asked 20 friends to define the term, you might find little agreement on what communication means, despite the fact that they all know how to do it. The situation isnât much different among communication scholars, who have also generated many dozens, if not hundreds of definitions for what we study. For example, some scholars who favor a âtransmissionâ view of communication have defined it as âthe process or act of transmitting a message from a sender to a receiver, through a channel and with the interference of noise.â2 Others who favor an âinteractionalâ view of communication have defined it as âa process through which persons create, maintain, and alter social order, relationships, and identitiesâ3 and believe that it is through communication that participants âcreate and share information with one another to reach a mutual understanding.â4
Long description:
Two women colleagues laughing while standing in a cafe at their workplace. One of the women is holding a takeout hot drink cup.
Itâs not essential that we all agree on precisely what communication isâand is notâbefore we can explore the value of theories. Discussions about the definition of communication can be valuable, and we believe they should be encouraged. At the same time, however, itâs useful to begin our journey into the world of communication theory with some shared ideas in mind. Therefore, instead of imposing one necessarily limited definition of what communication is, we have chosen to describe some of the most important characteristics of communication. Our list certainly wonât be exhaustive, but it will introduce you to some of the features of communication that matter most.
Communication is a process. Communication is something we do. As a process, communication unfolds over time, and what happens at one point can affect what occurs later. If a friend violates your trust by sharing information that you expected her to keep secret, that communication act might prevent you from confiding in her the next time you have something to share.
Communication is symbolic. We can never get into other peopleâs brains to know exactly what theyâre thinking, so we rely on symbols, which are representations of ideas, to understand one another. Words are symbols. The word tree isnât actually a tree; it just represents the idea of one. Gestures, facial expressions, and many other communicative behaviors are also symbols because they signify ideas.
Communication focuses on meaning. Because communication is symbolic, an important task is to figure out what meaning, or message, each symbol conveys. When you say, âI love you,â what does that mean? What message are you sending through your posture or through your silence? Youâve probably had the experience of being misunderstood and telling another person, âThat isnât what I meant.â If so, then you understand how challenging the process of meaning-making can be.
Communication is ever present. Finally, communication is with us constantly. Your behaviors can send messages to other people whether you intend those messages or not. Have you ever tried hard to stay awake during class? In spite of your efforts to look interested, your slouching posture and droopy eyelids were likely communicating your fatigue to others. Likewise, you are continually receiving messages from the people around you, whether those messages are intentional or unintentional.
Now that we understand some of the fundamental features of communication, letâs look at how communication came to be a focus of academic study.
Test Your Understanding
Reflecting on the Nature of Communication
How do you see the process of communication unfold in your own life?
What does it mean to call communication âever presentâ? Is it possible not to communicate at all?
WHERE THE COMMUNICATION DISCIPLINE CAME FROM
The study of communication has a long, rich history. Each of us has our own personal story to tell, filled with the important people and life events that have made us who we are today. Similarly, every field of study has its own biography or âstoryâ that helps others understand how that field came into being.
The communication process is fundamental to everything we do as human beings. As a result, the question of how we communicate with one another has been a topic of fascination for centuries. Scholars and laypersons alike have been motivated to understand what communication is, how it works, why it works better in some instances than others, and how it can best be taught. In fact, many of the communication principles we teach today can be found in the writings and teachings of such classical philosophers as Plato and Aristotle. Thus by briefly reviewing the historical roots of the communication discipline, we can gain insight into where we are today as a field of study and catch a glimpse into our future.
In this section, we will briefly review three classical patterns of thought about communication that emerged in ancient Greece: the Sophistic tradition, the Platonic tradition, and the Aristotelian tradition.5 We will then discuss how each of those traditions continues to inform the study of communication, as scholars in both the humanities and the social sciences further our understanding of how our everyday lives are created and sustained out of our continuing and constant interaction.6
Communication and the Classics
The formal study of communication began with the rise of democracy in Greece during the fifth century BCE.7 It came about largely in response to the conceptual and practical concerns of the Greek people. Philosophers in ancient Greece were debating such timeless questions as What is real?, What is truth?, and What is knowledge? The practical concerns of the Greeks, however, were focused more on certain political events and economic self-interest. For instance, the citizens of Syracuse had overthrown their tyrannical governor and established democratic rule. As a result, the courts were flooded with lawsuits for the return of confiscated property. Because Greek culture valued the spoken word and citizens were required to argue their own cases in court, a tremendous need arose for someone to teach plaintiffs and defendants how to effectively argue their cases. Thus, the birth of communication theory was a practical response to a social dilemma, and the person credited by most classical theorists and historians with inventing communication theory was Corax of Syracuse.
The Sophistic tradition. In ancient Greece, the term rhetoric was used to refer to the study of communication, and those who taught communication were called rhetoricians. Corax was a specialist in forensic rhetoric who started his own business tea...
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Zitierstile fĂŒr Exploring Communication Theory
APA 6 Citation
Floyd, K., Schrodt, P., Erbert, L., & Scharp, K. (2022). Exploring Communication Theory (2nd ed.). Taylor and Francis. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/3454391/exploring-communication-theory-making-sense-of-us-pdf (Original work published 2022)
Chicago Citation
Floyd, Kory, Paul Schrodt, Larry Erbert, and Kristina Scharp. (2022) 2022. Exploring Communication Theory. 2nd ed. Taylor and Francis. https://www.perlego.com/book/3454391/exploring-communication-theory-making-sense-of-us-pdf.
Harvard Citation
Floyd, K. et al. (2022) Exploring Communication Theory. 2nd edn. Taylor and Francis. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/3454391/exploring-communication-theory-making-sense-of-us-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).
MLA 7 Citation
Floyd, Kory et al. Exploring Communication Theory. 2nd ed. Taylor and Francis, 2022. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.