Politics, Communication, and Culture
Edited by:
- Alberto Gonzalez - Bowling Green State University, Ohio, USA
- Dolores V. Tanno - University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA
Volume:
20
March 1997 | 304 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Politics, Communication, and Culture--the newest edition of the International and Intercultural Communication Annual--offers a variety of perspectives on politics and culture. The contributors to this volume approach politics and culture from the domains of ethics, culture studies, narrative and mythic analysis, and critical theory. What unites these studies is the assumption that preexisting cultural values and practices that are brought to and reflected in activities of the state as well as in organized activities against the state. The authors also address the intercultural nature of the political activism they describe.
Part I describes ways of configuring politics, culture, and communication. Part II presents case studies that explore the cultural grounds of political activism. The final section introduces a new feature to the Annual: a forum in which scholars question, challenge, and explore a topic related to the volumeÆs theme. In this yearÆs forum, four scholars examine "Politics in Intercultural Training Programs."
PART ONE: PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS AND CULTURE
Alberto González and Dolores V Tanno
Politics, Communication and Culture
D Ray Heisey
Cultural Influences in Political Communication
Karen L Dace and Mark McPhail
Complicity and Coherence in Intra/Intercultural Communication
Randy Kluver
Political Identity
Catherine Becker
Toward an Ethical Theory for Comparative Political Communication Based on the Coherence between Universal Human Rights and Cultural Relativism
PART TWO: CULTURE AND NATIONALISM
Rona Tamiko Halualani
A Sovereign Nation's Functional Mythic Discourses
Lisa A Flores and Marouf A Hasain Jr
Returning to Aztl án
PART THREE: POLITICS AND ITS CULTURAL BASE
Shaorong Huang
Ritual, Culture, and Communication
William J Starosta and Sandra Wills Hannon
The Multilexicality of the Mohawk Incident in Oka, Québec as Reflected in the Recounted Narratives of Members of Different Receiving Communities
Jensen C Chung
Avoiding a `Bull Moose' Rebellion in Taiwanese Politics
FORUM: POLITICS IN INTERCULTURAL TRAINING PROGRAMS
Hui Ching-Chang and Richard Holt
Intercultural Training for Business Managers
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz
Introducing Power, Context, and Theory to Intercultural Training
Anita Foeman
The Problem with Power
Hui Ching-Chang and Richard Holt
Responses to Leeds-Hurwitz and Foeman