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Theory or Theories?. To begin …. Is it possible identify a Theory of communication field? There is no canon of general theory to which they all refer ONE specific Theory doesn’t exists yet . To begin …. Scholars of communication apparently neither agree nor disagree about much of anything
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To begin …. • Is it possible identify a Theory of communication field? • There is no canon of general theory to which they all refer • ONE specific Theory doesn’t exists yet
To begin …. • Scholars of communication apparently neither agree nor disagree about much of anything • For the most part, they simply ignore each other • There is no consensus on communication theory as a field
An interesting research …. • Anderson (1996) analyzed the contents of seven communication theory textbooks and identified 249 distinct “theories” • 195 appeared in only one of the seven books • the 22% appeared in more than one book • the 7% were included in more than three books
Numerous disciplinary fields …. • Budd and Ruben’s (1972) anthology of communication highlight 24 severaldisciplinary fields: from anthropology to zoology
Some observation … • The difficulty in building a specific communication theory is to connect with the attempt to summarize fragments of various disciplines forgetting that the whole is more than the sum of its parts
Some observation … • All communication theories are relevant to a common practical lifeworld in which communication is already a richly meaningful term
One hypothesis …. • The potential of communication theory can best be realized, not in a unified theory of communication but in a dialogical-dialectical disciplinary matrix
One hypothesis …. • Robert T. Craig observes that may be proposed a tentative reconstruction of the multidisciplinary traditions of communication theory • He identify 7 “traditional” alternative vocabularies for theorizing communication as a social practice
One hypothesis …. • Robert T. Craig identifies 7 “traditional” alternative vocabularies for theorizing communication as a social practice • A common awareness of certain complementarities among different types of communication theory
The 7 theories • Rhetoric • Semiotic • Phenomenology • Cybernetic • Socio-psychology • Socio-cultural • Critical
Rhetoric • Littlejohn observes: The primary source of ideas about communication prior to this century, dating back to ancient times was rhetoric (1996)
Rhetoric • Originated with the ancient Greek sophists, communication has typically been theorized as a practical art of discourse • Useful for explaining and under-stand notably “public discourse” • In the past also to solve social exigencies
Rhetoric • Also in modern times, we all know that rhetoric is a powerful force in society • It is important to understand how rhetoric works and to cultivate our abilities as critical consumers as well as effective producers of rhetoric
Rhetoric • We know that some people are better communicators than others • Communicators: skill or wisdom? • It challenges the commonplaces that mere words are less important than actions
Rhetoric • Problems bring into question • Which places may be attributed to emotion and logic in persuasion? • Rhetoric in inherently good or bad or just a neutral tool?
Rhetoric • Rhetoric can be in part connected to real problems that all of us face in our every-day life • For example: how are we swayed by the emotional appeals that pervade political and commercial advertising?
Rhetoric • In modernist thought, rhetoric has often been cast as the enemy of communication • For modernists • Communication is all about reason, truth, clarity, and understanding • Rhetoric is all about traditionalism, artifice, obfuscation, and manipu-lation
Semiotic • The study of signs. It has ancient roots, but can be said to have originated in the language theory of John Locke (1960-1979) • In the semiotic tradition, communication is theorized as intersubjective mediation by signs
Semiotic • Problems of communication in the semiotic tradition are primarily problems of (re)presentation and transmission of meaning • Locke argued that we cannot take it for granted that people ordinarily understand each other
Semiotic • Semiotic seems plausible and practical when: • It appeals to the commonsense beliefs that communication is easiest when we share a common language • The words can mean different things to different people so miscommu-nication is a constant danger
Semiotic • Semiotic can seem implausible when it challenges commonplace beliefs such as that: • ideas exist in people’s minds • words have correct meanings • meanings can be made explicit • communication is a voluntary act • we use signs and media of communication as tools to represent and share our thoughts
Phenomenology • Communication is theorized as dialogue or experience of otherness • Communication theorized in this way • explains the interplay of identity • and difference in authentic human relationships
Phenomenology • Communication, or dialogue, is founded on the experience of direct, unmediated contact with others • Direct contacts are essentials to prevent the risk of behaviors based on non-authenticity
Phenomenology • It supports the dialogue as ideal communication method, and under-line the inherent difficulties • Considering the “gap” between transmission and reception of messages, Peters argues that No distance is so great as that bet-ween two minds
Cybernetic We have decided to call the entire field of control and communication theory, whether in the machine or in the animal, by the name of Cybernetics (Wiener, 1948)
Extension to diverse areas of interest • Systems and information science • Cognitive and artificial science • Functionalist social theory • Network analysis • The Batesonian school of interpersonal communication
Cybernetic • Communication in the cybernetic tradition is theorized as information processing • It explains how all kinds of complex systems, whether living or nonli-ving, macro or micro, are able to function, and why they often malfunction
Is Cybernetic plausible? • No, if we consider the common-sense view: • it points out analogies between living and nonliving systems • it challenges commonplace beliefs about the significance of consciousness and emotions
Is Cybernetic plausible? • it questions our usual distinctions between mind and matter, form and content, the real and the artificial
Unquestioned positive aspect • Cybernetics points out that communication process can be enormously more complex than commonsense may be understand
In summary • Cybernetics cultivate a practical attitude that appreciates the complexity of communication problems and questions many of our usual differences between human and nonhuman information processing systems
Sociopsychology • Experimental socila psychology theorizes communication as a process of expression, interaction, and influence or, in short, • Communication is the process by which individuals interact and influence each other
Sociopsychology • Communication may occur: face-to-face
Sociopsychology • Communication may occur: one to many
Sociopsychology • Communication may occur: one to many and many to one
Sociopsychology BUT • In all formats it involves interposed elements that mediate between individuals
Sociopsychology and Semiotic • For semiotics communication is mediated by signs and signs systems • For social psychology communication is mediated by psychological predi-spositions (attitudes, emotional states, personality traits, uncon-scious conflicts, etc.), and by the effects of social interactions
Sociopsychology, Rhetoric, Cybernetic • Sociopsychology requires rigorous experimental evidence • It criticizes • Rhetoric for lacking proof that its persuasive techniques really work • Cybernetics for reducing all communication to information-processing algorithms that ignore the vagaries of motivation, personality, and emotion
Sociocultural theory • Communication is a symbolic process whereby reality is produced, maintai-ned, repaired, and transformed (Carey, 1989) • Wherever activities or artifacts have symbolic values that articulate indivi-duals into positions vis-à-vis each other or their collectivities, the com-municative is present (Rothenbuhler, 1993)
Sociocultural theory • Communication in sociology and anthropology is typically theorized as a symbolic process that produces and reproduces shared sociocultural patterns
Sociocultural theory • The word reproduce suggests the reflexivity of this process that is, • Our everyday interactions with others depend heavily on preexisting, shared cultural patterns and social structures • From this point of view, our everyday interactions largely reproduce the existing sociocultural order
A central problemof Sociocultural theory is … • to find the right balance that is, • to sort out the complex relations between production and reproduc-tion, particular local culture and universal natural law, in social life
Communication problems in the sociocultural tradition • Problems are thought of as gaps across • space - sociocultural diversity and relativity • time – sociocultural change
Communication problems in the sociocultural tradition • Conflicts, misunderstandings, and difficulties in coordination increase when social conditions afford a scarcity of shared rituals, rules, and expectations among members
Sociocultural theoryand “perturbations” * technological change * breakdown of traditional social orders * urbanization and mass society * bureaucratic rationalization * postmodern cultural fragmentation and globalization, etc. are disrupt/creative perturbations that produce new meanings of communication
Connections among sociocultural theory an the other communication theories • Hybrids are quite common • A relatively “pure” exemplars of sociocultural communication theory may be hard to come by
Some examples • Social action media theory melds a range of sociocultural, phenomeno-logical, and semiotic perspectives • Conversation analysis has interac-tionist, phenomenological, and semiotic roots
Some examples • Rhetorical theory has also taken a strongly sociocultural turn in which rhetoric has quite often been conceptualized as an instrument for improving human relations
… a distinct sociocultural “voice” • It is the voice that criticizes • social psychology for its excessive individualism, and insensitivity to cultural differences • classical rhetoric for its naïve assumptions • semiotics for abstracting signs from the larger sociocultural context