While the concept of communication has long been bound to a reductive
model of the exchange of information, very few scholars of
communication would argue that these assumptions are realistic,
without a long list of qualifying caveats. But the concept of
communication, built from the integration of semiotic signification
with the idea of information as the 'carrier' of transmitted meaning,
is so deeply ingrained and simple that even displacing it can seem
futile, if not absurd. Nevertheless, these foundational assumptions
tightly constrain the ways in which any interactional phenomena can be
conceived--and constraints upon our ways of understanding
communication drastically limit our capacity to understand our worlds
and the social processes that generate them, at any scale or level of
abstraction. Communication as Gesture traces the concept of
communication from its roots in classical rhetoric to its integration
in structural linguistics, semiotics, information theory, and
cybernetics, integrating perspectives from contemporary rhetorical
theory, relational psychology, interactional sociology, philosophy,
cognitive linguistics, discourse studies, multimodal semiotics, and
more. Because so much of our contemporary world is lived with and
through digital media technologies, the study of new media and social
media provides a rich illustration of the constraints imposed by our
reductive assumptions--and hints at the possibilities generated by
rethinking them. The gesture theory of communication introduced
presents a dimensional account of communication that is intuitively
accessible and theoretically rich while overturning reductive
assumptions of the linear character of interaction.
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Media(tion), Meaning, & Movement
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781787565173
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
Vendor
Emerald Publishing Limited
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter