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Beschreibung: freier Zugang
Umfang: 43 p.
Sprache: Englisch
Teil von: , Erschienen in: Communication Theory, volume 9 / 1999, number 2, pp. 119 - 161. [ISSN: 1468-2885; 1050-3293]
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Kollektion: Datenbank Internetquellen
Inhaltsangabe

"This essay reconstructs communication theory as a dialogical-dialectical field according to two principles: the constitutive model of communication as a metamodel and theory as metadiscursive practice. The essay argues that all communication theories are mutually relevant when addressed to a practical lifeworld in which “communication” is already a richly meaningful term. Each tradition of communication theory derives from and appeals rhetorically to certain commonplace beliefs about communication while challenging other beliefs. The complementarities and tensions among traditions generate a theoretical metadiscourse that intersects with and potentially informs the ongoing practical metadiscourse in society. In a tentative scheme of the field, rhetorical, semiotic, phenomenological, cybernetic, sociopsychological, sociocultural, and critical traditions of communication theory are distinguished by characteristic ways of defining communication and problems of communication, metadiscursive vocabularies, and metadiscursive commonplaces that they appeal to and challenge. Topoi for argumentation across traditions are suggested and implications for theoretical work and disciplinary practice in the field are considered." [Information des Anbieters]

Roots of Incoherence; Multidisciplinary Origins; From Sterile Eclecticism to Productive Fragmentation; Reconstructing Communication Theory as a Field: The Goal: Dialogical-Dialectical Coherence; Principle One: The Constitutive Model of Communication as Metamodel; Principle Two: Communication Theory as Metadiscourse; A Sketch of the Field: Seven Traditions; The Rhetorical Tradition: Communication as a Practical Art of Discourse; The Semiotic Tradition: Communication as intersubjective Mediation by Signs; The Phenomenological Tradition: Communication as the Experience of Otherness; The Cybernetic Tradition: Communication as Information Processing; The Sociopsychological Tradition: Communication as Expression, Interaction, and Influence; The Sociocultural Tradition: Communication as the (Re)Production of Social Order; The Critical Tradition: Communication as Discursive Reflection; Working the Field: Concluding Reflections; The Work Ahead: Exploration, Creation, Application; Implications for Disciplinary Practice in Communication Studies; Notes; References