The work and workings of human communication

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The work and workings of human communication

Robert E. Sanders

(Foundations of communication theory)

Wiley Blackwell, 2021

  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Discover the fundamentals of human communication with this comprehensive and insightful resource Written in four sections, The Work and Workings of Human Communication identifies the underlying fundamentals that make our communication distinctively human. These fundamentals are the common ground that tie together the many topics and subject matters covered by the study and discipline of communication. They are also the basis of the unique contribution of the communication discipline to the social sciences. Professor, researcher and theorist Robert E. Sanders starts by focusing on what is unique about human communication and moves on to an examination of the complexities of scientific inquiry in the social sciences in general and in the communication discipline specifically. At the heart of the matter is the fact that humans are thinking beings who can make choices and therefore are not entirely predictable. This points towards new topics and questions that are likely to arise as the discipline evolves. Sanders' approach leads to recognition of the fact that communication is at the center of how humans build our ways of life and participate together. By focusing on the underlying fundamentals that give rise to the discipline's topics and subject areas, The Work and Workings of Human Communication encourages students to engage in independent thought about what they want to contribute by: Emphasizing the importance of communication in creating, sustaining or changing-and participating in-our ways of life on an interpersonal level and on a societal level Recognizing that human communication is inherently collaborative; people affect situations by interacting with others, not acting on others Explaining the history, current agendas and possible future of the social science side of the Communication discipline A perfect resource for new graduate students in introductory communication courses who have an interest in the social science side of the discipline, The Work and Workings of Human Communication is also highly valuable for undergraduate communication and liberal arts students who don't possess a background in the discipline.

目次

Preface xiv Communication Matters xiv This Book's Approach xv This Book's Topics and Focus xvii Benefits to Students xviii The Main Fundamentals of Human Communication xix Communication among Us Humans vs Communication among Other Creatures xxii Our Subject Matter xxiii Our Discipline on the Social Science Side xxvi Overview of Contents xxix Section One: Preliminaries 1 1. Communication Among Animate Creatures, Especially Us Humans 7 1.1 Incentivizing Communication 8 1.2 Benefits (and Harms) that Communication Brings about 12 1.3 Incentivizing Re/actors' Attention to Communication 14 1.4 The Inherent Uncertainty before the Fact of What Communication Will Bring about 16 1.5 How We Humans Make Our Communication Work, or Work Better 20 1.5.1 The Communicator's Role in Making Communication Work 20 1.5.2 The Re/actor's Role in Making Communication Work 22 1.6 Human Communication as a Subject Matter within the Social Sciences 23 1.6.1 The Distinct Communication Part that Our Discipline Studies 25 1.6.2 The Boundary between Communicating and Other Conduct 26 1.7 A Sampling of Research on the "Communication Part" 27 1.7.1 Research on Communicative Items Produced in Re/action to Exigent Conditions 29 1.7.2 Research on Communicative Items and the Actual Results They Bring about 30 1.7.3 Research on the Doing of Communication 33 1.7.4 A Focus on the Communication Part across Open-Endedly-Many Topics 35 2. The Overall Effectiveness of Human Communication 36 2.1 Finding Evidence of the Effectiveness of Human Communication 36 2.1.1 Impressions of Ineffectiveness 37 2.1.2 Impressions of Effectiveness 37 2.1.3 The Impossibility of Getting Direct Evidence of Communicator Effectiveness 38 2.1.4 The Soundness of Indirect Evidence of Effectiveness 40 2.2 A Sample of Indirect Evidence of the Overall Effectiveness of Human Communication 42 2.2.1 The Communicative Achievement of a Mundane Event 43 2.2.2 The Communicative Infrastructure Underlying a Mundane Event 45 2.2.3 The Communicative Infrastructure Underlying Everything Else 47 Reprise of Section One and Overture to Section Two 49 Section Two: Fundamentals of Human Communication 51 3. Human-Made Environments We Create and Participate in Communicatively 57 3.1 Dual Human-Made Environments 58 3.1.1 The Motion-Action Distinction 60 3.1.2 A Modified Body-Mind Dualism 61 3.2 The Material Environment and Its Objective Realities 63 3.3 The Interpreted Environment and Its Subjective Realities 65 3.3.1 The Reality of Subjective Realities 66 3.3.2 Communication of, and About, Subjective Realities 67 3.3.3 From Private Subjective Realities to Shared Intersubjective Realities 70 3.3.4 The Tie between Objective and Subjective Realities: Searle's Version 73 3.3.5 The Tie between Objective and Subjective Realities: Garfinkel's Version 74 3.3.6 Our Discipline's Focus on Communication of and About Subjective Realities 75 3.3.7 The Focus of Other Social Sciences on Subjective Realities 77 3.3.8 Subjective Realities in Our Lives and Our Communication 78 4. Our Expressive Means and Communication Media 81 4.1 Our Expressive Means Are Unrestrictive 82 4.2 Our Communication Media Are Unrestrictive 84 4.3 Our Expressive Means Unavoidably Communicate Subjective Realities 85 4.3.1 The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis: Language, Culture, and Cognition 88 4.3.2 General Semantics: Language, Reality and Unreality 88 4.4 Our Communication Media Unavoidably Communicate Subjective Realities 89 4.4.1 The Medium of Writing: Plato on Its Evils 92 4.4.2 The Medium of Writing: Walter Ong on Its Cultural and Intellectual Impact 93 4.4.3 Mass Media vs Internet: Habermas on Dialogue and Democracy 94 5. Making Communication Work in the Human-Made Environment 95 5.1 Effortless Ways the Probability Is Increased of Bringing about a Targeted Re/action 96 5.1.1 Structures 97 5.1.2 Roles 99 5.1.3 Norms 99 5.1.4 Conventionalized Practices and Formulas 100 5.1.5 Shared Knowledge and/or Experience (Education) Re: Tasks and Activities 101 5.2 Effortful Ways of Increasing the Probability of Bringing about a Targeted Re/action 102 5.2.1 Components of Audience Research and Analysis and Their Application 103 5.2.2 Methodological Contingencies in Audience Research 104 5.2.3 Audience Analysis in a Digital Age 105 5.2.4 A Case Study of Mishandling Audience Research and Analysis 105 Reprise of Section Two and Overture to Section Three 109 Section Three: The Communication Discipline and Its Place in the Social Sciences 111 6. The Communication Discipline's Foundation and Evolution 115 6.1 The Discipline's Roots as Self-Contained and Independent 116 6.2 The Modern Discipline's Expanding Scope 118 6.3 The Tradition of Communicator-Centrism and the Linear Model 122 6.4 From Monologic to Dialogic: The Collaborative Model 123 6.4.1 Collaboration in the Doing of Communication 123 6.4.1.1 Overt vs De Facto Collaboration 126 6.4.1.2 The Collaborative Model in Ostensibly Monological Situations 127 6.4.1.3 Communicator-Centrism in Actually Dialogical Situations 130 6.4.2 Collaboration on the Actual Results of Communication 131 6.4.2.1 Collaboration on Re/actions among Masses of People 133 6.4.2.2 The Collaborative Basis of Human-Made Interpreted Environments 134 6.4.2.3 Collaboration On and Through Linkages Among Multiple Communicative Episodes 135 7. The Communication Discipline's Subject Areas 137 7.1 The Present: Studying Communication as It Affects People's Interests and Undertakings 137 7.1.1 The US Discipline's Two Main Professional Associations: NCA and ICA 138 7.1.2 Fifty-Seven Subject Area Divisions Across the NCA and ICA (Ca. 2017) 139 7.1.3 Common Ground Across Our Subject Area Divisions 144 7.1.4 A Rationale for the Discipline's Current Subject Area Divisions 144 7.2 The Future: Studying Communication as the Engine of the Human-Made Environment 145 7.2.1 The Relevance of What We Already Study to the Discipline's Possible Future 149 7.2.2 A New Specialization in Research and Theory: Reverse Engineering 150 7.2.3 A New Subject Area: The Linking of Independent Communicative Episodes 151 8. Positioning the Communication Discipline Among the Social Sciences 153 8.1 The Minority Position: Communication is an Interdisciplinary Subject Matter 156 8.1.1 The Case against Studying Communication in Any One Discipline 156 8.1.2 Four Reasons Why an Interdisciplinary Approach Is Inadequate 159 8.1.2.1 Reason One: Communication-Specific Proficiencies and Skills are Variable 160 8.1.2.2 Reason Two: Discordant Extra-Communicative Influences Have to Be Reconciled 161 8.1.2.3 Reason Three: Extra-Communicative Influences Cannot Be Fully Determinate 161 8.1.2.4 Reason Four: Communication Produces What Other Social Sciences Study 162 8.2 The Majority Position: The Communication Discipline Is an Independent Social Science 163 8.2.1 Past Efforts to Formulate Our Discipline's Identity and Mission 164 8.2.1.1 Formulations Sponsored by the Association of Communication Administrators 164 8.2.1.2 A Formulation Published by the National Communication Association 166 8.2.2 The Elusiveness of the Communication Part 168 8.3 Our Discipline's Identity and Mission Presently vs in a Possible Future 171 8.3.1 Our Discipline's Identity and Mission Presently 172 8.3.2 Our Discipline's Identity and Mission in a Possible Future 173 Reprise of Section Three and Overture to Section Four 177 Section Four: Scientific Inquiry in the Social Sciences and in Communication 179 9. The Practice of Scientific Inquiry in General 187 9.1 The Human Face of Scientific Inquiry 189 9.1.1 Personal Expertise 190 9.1.2 The Discovery Process 191 9.1.3 Scientific Communities 192 9.1.4 Normal Science and Paradigm Shifts in Scientific Communities 193 9.1.5 The Practical Need for Scientific Communities 194 9.1.6 The Epistemological Necessity of Scientific Communities 197 9.2 The Presumption of Orderliness on Which All Scientific Inquiry Rests 198 9.3 Fact and Theory 203 10. Scientific Inquiry in the Social Sciences 209 10.1 Social Science vs Physical Science 210 10.2. The Problematics of Scientific Inquiry in the Social Sciences 215 10.3 Qualitative vs Quantitative Research and Analysis 222 10.3.1 The Detachment-Neutrality Problem in Social Science Inquiry 224 10.3.2 Methodological Issues that Divide the Qualitative and Quantitative Sides 225 10.3.2.1 Concerns about Quantitative Research and Analysis from the Qualitative Side 226 10.3.2.2 Concerns about Qualitative Research and Analysis from the Quantitative Side 227 10.3.3 The Scientific Community's Role in Ensuring Sound Research and Theory 229 10.3.4 Orderliness Found via Qualitative Research and Analysis 231 10.3.4.1 Orderliness in an Action Sequence 231 10.3.4.2 Orderliness in the Cultural Valuation of Speaking 234 10.3.5 Orderliness Found via Quantitative Research and Analysis 235 10.3.5.1 Orderliness in the Geographical Variation of an Interpersonal Action 236 10.3.5.2 Orderliness in the Covariation of Communication Practices and Marital Stability 237 10.3.6 Orderliness Found via Quantitative Plus Qualitative Research and Analysis 239 10.4 The Critical Side vs the Scientific Side of the Social Sciences 240 11. Social Scientific Inquiry in the Communication Discipline 242 11.1 The Problematics of Social Scientific Inquiry in the Communication Discipline 243 11.2 Two Reasons Why the Discipline's Proliferation of Subject Matters May Be "Natural" 246 11.2.1 The Discipline's Subject Matter Spans Open-Endedly-Many Phenomena 246 11.2.2 The Discipline's Culture Favors a Proliferation of Subject Matters 247 11.3 Groundwork Already Laid for the Coalescence of Our Research and Theory 248 11.3.1 Theories Related to Exigences that Incentivize the Doing of Communication 249 11.3.2 Theories about the Results that Communication Brings about 251 11.3.3 Theories Related to the Doing of Communication 254 11.4 The Coalescence of Our Research and Theory in a Possible Future 257 Reprise of Section Four and This Book 262 Bibliography 264 Index 270

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