Read more
Informationen zum Autor Thomas K. Nakayama is Professor of Communication Studies at Northeastern University. He is founding editor of the Journal of International and Intercultural Communication and has published widely in the areas of critical race and critical intercultural communication, including Intercultural Communication in Contexts, Fourth Edition (2007), Experiencing Intercultural Communication, Third Edition (2007) and Human Communication in Society, Second Edition (2010). Rona Tamiko Halualani is Professor of Intercultural Communication in the Department of Communication Studies at San Jose State University. Her research interests include the following: critical intercultural communication studies, intercultural contact, race/ethnicity; diversity, prejudice, identity and cultural politics, diasporic identity, and Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders. She is the author of In the Name of Hawaiians: Native Identities and Cultural Politics (2002). Klappentext The Handbook of Critical Intercultural Communication aims to furnish scholars with a consolidated resource of works that highlights all aspects of the field, its historical inception, logics, terms, and possibilities.* A consolidated resource of works that highlights all aspects of this developing field, its historical inception, logics, terms, and possibilities* Traces the significant historical developments in intercultural communication* Helps students and scholars to revisit, assess, and reflect on the formation of critical intercultural communication studies* Posits new directions for the field in terms of theorizing, knowledge production, and social justice engagement Zusammenfassung This outstanding new resource traces the significant historical developments in intercultural communication, helps scholars reflect on the formation of critical intercultural communication studies and posits new directions for the field in terms of theorizing, knowledge production, and social justice engagement. Inhaltsverzeichnis Notes on Contributors viii Acknowledgments xvii 1 Critical Intercultural Communication Studies: At a Crossroads 1 Rona Tamiko Halualani and Thomas K. Nakayama Part I Critical Junctures and Refl ections In Our Field: A Revisiting 17 2 Writing the Intellectual History of Intercultural Communication 21 Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz 3 Critical Reflections on Culture and Critical Intercultural Communication 34 Dreama G. Moon 4 Reflecting Upon "Enlarging Conceptual Boundaries: A Critique of Research in Intercultural Communication" 53 Alberto González 5 Intercultural Communication and Dialectics Revisited 59 Judith N. Martin and Thomas K. Nakayama 6 Reflections on "Problematizing 'Nation' in Intercultural Communication Research" 84 Kent A. Ono 7 Reflections on "Bridging Paradigms: How Not to Throw Out the Baby of Collective Representation with the Functionalist Bathwater in Critical Intercultural Communication" 98 S. Lily Mendoza 8 Revisiting the Borderlands of Critical Intercultural Communication 112 Leda Cooks 9 Expanding the Circumference of Intercultural Communication Study 130 William J. Starosta and Guo-Ming Chen Part II Critical Dimensions in Intercultural Communication Studies 147 10 Internationalizing Critical Race Communication Studies: Transnationality, Space, and Affect 149 Raka Shome 11 Re-imagining Intercultural Communication in the Context of Globalization 171 Kathryn Sorrells 12 Culture as Text and Culture as Theory: Asiacentricity and Its Raison D'être in Intercultural Communication Research 190 Yoshitaka Miike 13 Entering the Inter: Power Lines in Intercultural Communication 216 Aimee Carrillo...