
Human Communication as a Field of Study
Selected Contemporary Views
Sarah Sanderson King(Editor)
State University of New York Press
Published on 25. August 1989
Book
Paperback/Softback
282 pages
978-0-88706-987-1 (ISBN)
Description
The authors analyze and discuss the field of communication from a multidimensional point of view. Divided into three parts, the first traces its history from scientific, humanistic, and technological roots. The second explores communication theory in the areas of interpersonal, organizational, mass media, intercultural, telecommunication, nonverbal, and with reference to issues of gender as the authors summarize the most significant theories, research, and practices in each area. A discussion of the future direction of communication research is provided in the final section.
Reviews / Votes
"I think the idea behind this book is excellent. There is nothing currently available which duplicates it, and it fills a real need." - Gerry Philipsen"The field of communication suffers from a dearth of theoretical discussion. King's book provides a feel for the diversity and evolution of communication as a field of study." - Ted. J. Smith III
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Albany, NY
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
US School Grade: College Graduate Student and over
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
490 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-88706-987-1 (9780887069871)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Sarah Sanderson King is Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at Central Connecticut State University.
Content
Preface
Contributors
Part I. An Orientation
1. Communication: Roots, Visions, and Prospects
Sarah Sanderson King
2. Human Communication as a Field of Behavioral Science: Jack Hilgard and His Committee
Wilbur Schramm
3. The Rhetorical Tradition
Samuel L. Becker
4. The Social Scientific Roots of the Mass Communication Tradition
Verling C. Troldahl
5. Mass Media: A Bricolage of Paradigms
Scott R. Olson
Part II. Sampling of Research and Scholarship
6. Communication in Establishing, Maintaining, and Terminating Interpersonal Relationships: A Study of Mateship
Donald P. Cushman
7. Intercultural Communication as a Focus of Research: A Programmatic Note
Wimal Dissanayake
8. Nonverbal Communication
Randall P. Harrison
9. Gender Communication
Annie L. Cotten-Huston
10. Organizational Communication
Rowland G. Baughman
11. The Role of Communication in High-Technology Organizations: The Emergence of High-Speed Management
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah Sanderson King
12. Perspectives for Research on Group Embeddedness in Organizations
Linda L. Pulnam
13. Political Communication: A Generic Rhetorical Criticism
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah Sanderson King
14. Telecommunications in an Information Society
Herbert S. Dordick
Part III. Future Directions
15. Communications Study: A Futures Perspective
Frederick Williams
16. The Breadth of Communication Research and the Parameters of Communication Theory
Robert E. Sanders
17. Communication, Knowledge, and Ethics: A Twentieth Century Perspective
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah Sanderson King
References
Index
Contributors
Part I. An Orientation
1. Communication: Roots, Visions, and Prospects
Sarah Sanderson King
2. Human Communication as a Field of Behavioral Science: Jack Hilgard and His Committee
Wilbur Schramm
3. The Rhetorical Tradition
Samuel L. Becker
4. The Social Scientific Roots of the Mass Communication Tradition
Verling C. Troldahl
5. Mass Media: A Bricolage of Paradigms
Scott R. Olson
Part II. Sampling of Research and Scholarship
6. Communication in Establishing, Maintaining, and Terminating Interpersonal Relationships: A Study of Mateship
Donald P. Cushman
7. Intercultural Communication as a Focus of Research: A Programmatic Note
Wimal Dissanayake
8. Nonverbal Communication
Randall P. Harrison
9. Gender Communication
Annie L. Cotten-Huston
10. Organizational Communication
Rowland G. Baughman
11. The Role of Communication in High-Technology Organizations: The Emergence of High-Speed Management
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah Sanderson King
12. Perspectives for Research on Group Embeddedness in Organizations
Linda L. Pulnam
13. Political Communication: A Generic Rhetorical Criticism
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah Sanderson King
14. Telecommunications in an Information Society
Herbert S. Dordick
Part III. Future Directions
15. Communications Study: A Futures Perspective
Frederick Williams
16. The Breadth of Communication Research and the Parameters of Communication Theory
Robert E. Sanders
17. Communication, Knowledge, and Ethics: A Twentieth Century Perspective
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah Sanderson King
References
Index