Communication: An IntroductionSAGE, 1999 M12 15 - 240 páginas Written as an introduction for beginning students, this book offers a thorough, yet lively, overview of human communication in all its aspects. Accessibly written and assuming no prior knowledge of the discipline Communication: An Introduction: offers a thorough, yet lively, examination of all aspects of human communication, including: a summary of its nature, form and function; a detailed analysis of all the levels of communication; a description and overview of the different traditions of communication studies; and a consideration of the future of communication - as a phenomenon and as a field of research. |
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Página 5
... develop approaches that are strongly influenced by natural science . Psychology is perhaps the best example of this tendency , but also in sociology there have been strong tendencies towards approaches used in natural sciences . As so ...
... develop approaches that are strongly influenced by natural science . Psychology is perhaps the best example of this tendency , but also in sociology there have been strong tendencies towards approaches used in natural sciences . As so ...
Página 6
... developed , more or less nation - wide library system , including the ' national library ' of each country . For example : · the Library of Congress in Washington ( some 25 million books ) ; • the British Library in London ( more than ...
... developed , more or less nation - wide library system , including the ' national library ' of each country . For example : · the Library of Congress in Washington ( some 25 million books ) ; • the British Library in London ( more than ...
Página 12
... developed ( think of the many institutions within the economic sector , for instance , ranging from , say , small local shops to world - wide conglomerates ) . Each one of the sectors also has an academic superstructure of its own ...
... developed ( think of the many institutions within the economic sector , for instance , ranging from , say , small local shops to world - wide conglomerates ) . Each one of the sectors also has an academic superstructure of its own ...
Página 19
... developed at the pace they have during the last 50 years . The insistence on translation between theory and model , model and data - established in order to make possible theo- retically relevant analysis of empirical data in terms of ...
... developed at the pace they have during the last 50 years . The insistence on translation between theory and model , model and data - established in order to make possible theo- retically relevant analysis of empirical data in terms of ...
Página 20
... developed by the path - breaking German sociologist , Max Weber ( 1864–1920 ) , and successfully applied in his innovative studies of organizations ( see section 5.3 ) . ) Some concrete examples of differential development in three ...
... developed by the path - breaking German sociologist , Max Weber ( 1864–1920 ) , and successfully applied in his innovative studies of organizations ( see section 5.3 ) . ) Some concrete examples of differential development in three ...
Contenido
1 | |
27 | |
Chapter 3 Culture and Society Media and Communication | 53 |
Part III Levels of Communication | 70 |
Chapter 5 Organizational Communication | 105 |
Chapter 6 Societal Communication Mass Communication | 138 |
Chapter 7 International and Intercultural Communication | 170 |
Part IV The Future of Communication | 199 |
References | 206 |
Name Index | 212 |
Subject Index | 214 |
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Términos y frases comunes
adhocracies adolescence agents of socialization and/or basic behaviour beta coefficients called cell century characteristics characterized communication research communication studies countries course Culture in Society decades defined developed diffusion dimensions disciplines discussed economic example expressed family communication climate Figure formal models functions group communication homo sapiens human communication important individual communication influence innovation instance interaction international communication Internet interpersonal communication language least less mass communication mass media means munication networks number of different offers organizational communication orientation patterns perspective phenomena political position power distance primarily processes production relations relationships relatively represent Rosengren scholarly science and scholarship sectors so-called social sciences societal systems sociogram sometimes specific speech acts spiral of silence structure substantive theory Sweden Swedish symbols television tend tendencies traditional TV viewing types typology uncertainty avoidance units variables various video nasties weak tie Wheel of Culture