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Communication Theory as a Field

"Communication Theory as a Field" is a 1999 article by Robert T. Craig, attempting to unify the academic field of communication theory.[1][2]

Craig argues that communication theorists can become unified in dialogue by charting what he calls the "dialogical dialectical tension", or the similarities and differences in their understanding of "communication" and demonstrating how those elements create tension within the field.[3] Craig mapped these similarities and differences into seven suggested traditions of communication theory and showed how each of these traditions understand communication, as well as how each tradition's understanding creates tension with the other traditions.[4]

The article has received multiple awards,[5][6] has become the foundation for many communication theory textbooks,[7][8][9][10][11] and has been translated into several different languages.[12][13]

"Communication theory as a field" has created two main dialogues between Craig and other theorists. Myers argued that Craig misrepresented the theoretical assumptions of his theory, and that the theory itself does not distinguish between good and bad theories.[14] Craig responded that Myers misunderstood not only the basic argument of the article, but also misrepresented his own case study.[15] Russill proposed pragmatism as an eighth tradition of communication theory,[16][17] Craig responded by expanding this idea and placing Russill's proposition in conversation with the other seven traditions.[18]

Recognition and awards edit

"Communication Theory as a Field" has been recognized by multiple associations for its influence upon the field of communication. These awards include the Best Article Award from the International Communication Association[5] as well as the Golden Anniversary Monograph Award from the National Communication Association.[6] That work has since been translated into French[12] and Russian.[13] The theory presented in "Communication Theory as a Field" has become the basis of the book "Theorizing Communication" which Craig co-edited with Heidi Muller,[8] as well as being adopted by several other communication theory textbooks as a new framework for understanding the field of communication theory.[7][9][10][11]

Metamodel edit

Sparked by the "Third Debate" within the field of International Relations Theory in the 1980s, "Communication Theory as a Field" expanded the conversation regarding disciplinary identity in the field of communication.[19][2][20][21][22][23][24] At that time, communication theory textbooks had little to no agreement on how to present the field or which theories to include in their textbooks.[25][26] This article has since become the foundational framework for four different textbooks to introduce the field of communication.[7][8][9][10][11] In this article Craig "proposes a vision for communication theory that takes a huge step toward unifying this rather disparate field and addressing its complexities."[9] To move toward this unifying vision Craig focused on communication theory as a practical discipline and shows how "various traditions of communication theory can be engaged in dialogue on the practice of communication."[27][28] In this deliberative process theorists would engage in dialog about the "practical implications of communication theories."[15] In the end Craig proposes seven different traditions of communication theory and outlines how each one of them would engage the others in dialogue.[29]

Craig argues that while the study of communication and communication theory has become a rich and flourishing field "Communication theory as an identifiable field of study does not yet exist" and the field of communication theory has become fragmented into separate domains which simply ignore each other.[30] This inability to engage in dialog with one another causes theorists to view communication from isolated viewpoints, and denies them the richness that is available when engaging different perspectives.[31] Craig argues that communication theorists are all engaging in the study of practical communication.[31] By doing so different traditions are able to have a common ground from which a dialog can form, albeit each taking a different perspective of communication.[31] Through this process of forming a dialog between theorists with different viewpoints on communication "communication theory can fully engage with the ongoing practical discourse (or metadiscourse) about communication in society."[31]

The communication discipline began not as a single discipline, but through many different disciplines independently researching communication.[31] This interdisciplinary beginning has separated theorists through their different conceptions of communication, rather than unifying them in the common topic of communication.[32] Craig argues that the solution to this incoherence in the field of communication is not a unified theory of communication, but to create a dialogue between these theorists which engages these differences with one another to create new understandings of communication.[33][34]

To achieve this dialog Craig proposes what he calls "Dialogical-Dialectical coherence," or a "common awareness of certain complementaries and tensions among different types of communication theory."[3] Craig believes that the different theories cannot develop in total isolation from one another, therefore this dialogical-dialectical coherence will provide a set of background assumptions from which different theories can engage each other in productive argumentation.[3] Craig argues for a metatheory, or "second level" theory which deals with "first level" theories about communication.[35] This second level metamodel of communication theory would help to understand the differences between first level communication traditions.[36] With this thesis in place, Craig proposes seven suggested traditions of communication that have emerged and each of which have their own way of understanding communication.[37][38]

  1. Rhetorical: views communication as the practical art of discourse.[39]
  2. Semiotic: views communication as the mediation by signs.[40]
  3. Phenomenological: communication is the experience of dialogue with others.[41]
  4. Cybernetic: communication is the flow of information.[42]
  5. Socio-psychological: communication is the interaction of individuals.[43]
  6. Socio-cultural: communication is the production and reproduction of the social order.[44]
  7. Critical: communication is the process in which all assumptions can be challenged.[45]

These proposed seven traditions of communication theory are then placed on two separate tables[46] first to show how each traditions different interpretation of communication defines the tradition's vocabulary, communication problems, and commonplaces,[47] and next to show what argumentation between the traditions would look like.[48] Craig then outlines the specifics of each tradition.[49]

Conclusion edit

Craig concluded with an open invitation to explore how the differences in these theories might shed light on key issues, show where new traditions could be created, and engaging communication theory with communication problems through metadiscourse.[50] Craig further proposes several future traditions that could possibly be fit into the metamodel.[51] A feminist tradition where communication is theorized as "connectedness to others", an aesthetic tradition theorizing communication as "embodied performance", an economic tradition theorizing communication as "exchange", and a spiritual tradition theorizing communication on a "nonmaterial or mystical plane of existence."[52]

Response edit

Myers, constitutive metamodel, and truth edit

In 2001 Myers, a computer-mediated communication scholar from Loyola University New Orleans, criticizes Craig's ideas in "A Pox on All Compromises: A reply to Craig (1999)."[14] Myers makes two main arguments against Craig's article. Myers argues that Craig misrepresents the metamodel, and that the lack of any critical truth within Craigs construction is problematic for the field of communication theory.[53][18] The metamodel is misrepresented by unjustly arguing that there is a separation between first and second level constitutive models while hiding the paradox within this statement, and that it privileges the constitutive model rather than another theoretical conception.[54] Next Myers argues that Craig fails to draw any way to discern truth within the theories.[55] Using a case study regarding the rise and fall of technological determinism among computer-mediated communication scholars,[56] Myers argues that a metamodel needs to provide some mechanism that will "reduce misrepresentation and mistake" in evaluating theory.[57] Myers frames Craig's ideas of collective discourse without an evaluative criteria of what is good theory and bad theory as "a Mad Hatter's tea party" which will "allow all to participate in this party of discourse" but will not be able to "inform any of the participants when it is time to leave."[57]

Craig's response to Myers edit

Craig responded, in "an almost Jamesian reply",[58] that Myers criticisms were not founded in actual inconsistencies within Craigs argument.[59] Rather they were founded in the difference between Myers and Craig's "respective notions of truth and the proper role of empirical truth as a criterion for adjudicating among theories."[59] In regard to Myers first claim that the separation between first level theories and second level metatheory is paradoxical and therefore an inaccurate or misguided distinction, Craig admits that there is a paradox inherent within a separation between first order theories and metatheory but "slippage between logical levels is an inherent feature (or bug) of communication, and we should not forget that theory is, among other things, communication. "[60] Craig cites Gregory Bateson as pointing out that while the theory of logical types forbids the mixing of different "levels" to avoid paradox, "practical communication necessarily does exactly that."[61] Actual communication is fraught with paradox, and while a logicians ideal would have us try and resolve these paradoxes, in actual practice we don't because there is no way to do so.[61] In actually occurring communication people employ different means of dealing with this paradox, but resolving the paradox is not a possible solution.[61] Craig argues that Myers has been unable to prove any inconsistency or misrepresentation when it came to using the constitutive model for his metamodel.[62] Rather than trying to subvert every other theory to a constitutional model, Craig used the constitutive model not for some theory of truth or logical necessity, but because the constitutive model pragmatically will accomplish the goal of the project, that of opening up a space from which competing theories of communication can interact.[60] With this the constitutional model will be able to maintain a theoretical cosmopolitanism.[63]

On the second argument that the metamodel lacks any empirical truth criteria, Craig argues that not only did Myers miss the point of the metamodel by claiming it should evaluate the truth of theories[64] but that Myers own case study fails to back up his point.[65] The metamodel itself does not distinguish the falseness of other models.[66] However, contrary to Myers claim, the metamodel does allow theorists engaged in discussion to judge the validity of theories "on the basis of empirical evidence in ordinary reasonable ways."[66] What the metamodel does deny is a universally established absolute truth in the field of communication theory.[67] Craig points out that Myers was correct in that the metamodel is ill-equipped to judge theories as valid or invalid, it also doesn't do a good job of closing "the Antarctic ozone hole or solve other problems for which it was not designed."[68] The case study that Myers presents is the debate about technological determinism in the realm of Computer Mediated Communication.[56] Craig points out that this debate occurred between social scientific researchers.[68] This type of research has a shared commitment to empirical research methods.[68] So in spite of already possessing a shared truth criteria, these researchers failed to prevent errors Myers hopes would be avoided by holding onto a form of absolute truth.[68] This case study would be a good critique of empirical truth but "how it supports a critique of the constitutive metamodel is less than apparent."[68] By relying upon this case study Myers sabotages his argument for establishing an absolute truth criteria, demonstrating that "we would gain little by holding on to such a criterion."[68]

Russill, pragmatism as an eighth tradition edit

After this exchange between Myers and Craig, there was no real disciplinary discussion of the metamodel[69][70] besides textbooks which used the metamodel as a framework for introducing the field.[7][8][9][10][11] Then in 2004 in an unpublished dissertation,[16][71] which was mentioned in a footnote in his 2005 "The road not Taken: William James's Radical Empiricism and Communication Theory,"[17][71] Russill proposed the possibly of pragmatism as an eighth tradition of communication studies.[71][72][73][74] This was attempted by using "Craig's rules" for the requirements of a tradition in communication theory[75][76][58] which Russill formulates as "a problem formulation..., an initial vocabulary..., and arguments for the plausibility of this viewpoint in relation to prevailing traditions of theory."[77][78]

Russill did not write his dissertation with the goal of constructing a tradition of communication theory, rather he was attempting to "resuscitate and reconstruct Dewey's theory of the public as a pragmatist theory of democratic communication."[75][79] To accomplish this goal Russill places Dewey in conversation with a variety of theorists including William James, John Locke, James Carey, Michel Foucault, Jürgen Habermas, and Walter Lippmann among others.[75][16] Russill makes the argument that the pragmatist tradition "conceptualizes communication in response to the problem of incommensurability."[80] Incommensurability being how a pluralistic society can engage in cooperation when there is an absence "of common, absolute standards for resolving differences."[80] Russill briefly attempted to construct a pragmatist tradition of communication only to establish Dewey's theory of the public within that tradition.[81][72] To do this he outlines pragmatism as a tradition that identifies the problem formulation as "incommensurability", and the vocabulary as "democracy, publics, power, criticism, response-ability, triple contingency."[77][80]

Craig's response to Russill edit

Craig responds to this in "Pragmatism in the Field of Communication Theory" and mentions that while Russill "does not entirely follow 'Craig's Rules'" for a new tradition of communication theory, Russill "does define a pragmatist tradition in terms of a distinct way of framing the problem of communication and articulates premises that make the tradition theoretically and practically plausible."[81] Craig points out that Russill is not the first communication theorists who writes on pragmatism, however he is the first to use the constitutive metamodel to define it as a tradition of communication.[82] This conception of pragmatism as an eighth tradition of communication studies allows a new space for theories, which Craig identified as either ambiguously placed or neglected, to "immediately snap into focus as contributors to a distinct [pragmatic] tradition."[82]

To fully outline a new tradition of communication theory, Russill would have had to fully incorporate that tradition within the dialogical-dialectical matrix.[83] Russill failed to fully consider the full range of criticism which would occur between the Pragmatist tradition and the other traditions of communication.[83] Craig uses the dialogical-dialectical matrix to outline how pragmatism could be incorporated into the metamodel.[84]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Craig 1999.
  2. ^ a b Littlejohn & Foss 2008, pp. 6.
  3. ^ a b c Craig 1999, pp. 124.
  4. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 132–149.
  5. ^ a b (PDF). International Communication Association. 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 26, 2011. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  6. ^ a b "National Communication Association Awards" (PDF). National Communication Association. 2001. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  7. ^ a b c d Craig 2007, pp. 125.
  8. ^ a b c d Craig & Muller 2007.
  9. ^ a b c d e Littlejohn & Foss 2008.
  10. ^ a b c d Griffin 2006.
  11. ^ a b c d Miller 2005.
  12. ^ a b Craig 2009b.
  13. ^ a b Craig, Robert (February 3, 2011). (PDF). University of Colorado. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 12, 2010. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
  14. ^ a b Myers 2001.
  15. ^ a b Craig 2001.
  16. ^ a b c Russill 2004.
  17. ^ a b Russill 2005.
  18. ^ a b Craig 2007.
  19. ^ Donsback 2006.
  20. ^ Penman 2000.
  21. ^ Anderson & Baym 2004.
  22. ^ Lindlof & Taylor 2002.
  23. ^ D'Angelo 2002.
  24. ^ Jimenez & Guillem 2009.
  25. ^ Anderson 1996, pp. 200–201.
  26. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 120.
  27. ^ Craig 2006, pp. 13.
  28. ^ Penman 2000, pp. 6.
  29. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 132–146.
  30. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 119–120.
  31. ^ a b c d e Craig 1999, p. 121.
  32. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 120–123.
  33. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 123–125.
  34. ^ Penman 2000, pp. 76.
  35. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 126–127.
  36. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 123–132.
  37. ^ Anderson & Baym 2004, pp. 440.
  38. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 132–134.
  39. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 135–136.
  40. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 136–138.
  41. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 138–140.
  42. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 141–142.
  43. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 142–144.
  44. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 144–146.
  45. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 146–149.
  46. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 133–134.
  47. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 132, 133.
  48. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 132, 134.
  49. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 135–149.
  50. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 149.
  51. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 149, 151.
  52. ^ Craig 1999, pp. 151.
  53. ^ Myers 2001, pp. 219.
  54. ^ Myers 2001, pp. 219–123, 226.
  55. ^ Myers 2001, pp. 222–223.
  56. ^ a b Myers 2001, pp. 223–226.
  57. ^ a b Myers 2001, pp. 226.
  58. ^ a b Russill 2005, pp. 300.
  59. ^ a b Craig 2001, pp. 232.
  60. ^ a b Craig 2001, pp. 234.
  61. ^ a b c Craig 2001, pp. 233.
  62. ^ Craig 2001, pp. 234–235.
  63. ^ Craig 2001, pp. 236.
  64. ^ Craig 2001, pp. 236–237.
  65. ^ Craig 2001, pp. 236, 238.
  66. ^ a b Craig 2001, pp. 237.
  67. ^ Craig 2001, pp. 230.
  68. ^ a b c d e f Craig 2001, pp. 238.
  69. ^ Craig 2007, pp. 125–126.
  70. ^ Craig 2009a, pp. 7.
  71. ^ a b c Craig 2007, pp. 126.
  72. ^ a b Russill 2004, pp. 281–282.
  73. ^ Russill 2005, pp. 296–298.
  74. ^ Craig 2009a.
  75. ^ a b c Craig 2007, pp. 130.
  76. ^ Russill 2004, pp. 282.
  77. ^ a b Russill 2004, pp. 281.
  78. ^ Craig 2007, pp. 133.
  79. ^ Russill 2004, pp. iii, 5, 68–105, 279–283.
  80. ^ a b c Craig 2007, pp. 131.
  81. ^ a b Craig 2007, pp. 130–131.
  82. ^ a b Craig 2007, pp. 134.
  83. ^ a b Craig 2007, pp. 135.
  84. ^ Craig 2007, pp. 135–137.

References edit

  • Anderson, John Arthur (1996). Communication Theory: Epistemological Foundations. Guilford Press. ISBN 978-1-57230-083-5. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  • Anderson, James A.; Baym, Geoffrey (December 2004). "Philosophies and Philosophic Issues in Communication, 1995-2004". Journal of Communication. 55 (4): 437–448. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2004.tb02647.x.
  • Craig, Robert T. (May 1999). "Communication Theory as a Field" (PDF). Communication Theory. 9 (2): 119–161. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.1999.tb00355.x. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  • Craig, Robert T. (May 2001). "Minding My Metamodel, Mending Myers". Communication Theory. 11 (2): 231–240. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.2001.tb00241.x.
  • Craig, Robert T. (May 2007). "Pragmatism in the Field of Communication Theory". Communication Theory. 2007 (17): 125–145. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.2007.00292.x.
  • Craig, Robert (2006). "A Path Through the Methodological Divides" (PDF). KEIO Communication Review. 28: 9–17. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  • Craig, Robert T. (2009a). "Reflection on "Communication Theory as a Field" (PDF). Revue internationale de communication sociale et publique (2): 7–12. doi:10.4000/communiquer.346. Retrieved January 29, 2011.
  • Craig, Robert T. (2009b). "La communication en tant que champ d'études" (PDF). Revue internationale de communication sociale et publique. 1: 1–42. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  • Craig, Robert; Muller, Heidi, eds. (April 2007). Theorizing Communication: Readings Across the Traditions. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-4129-5237-8. Retrieved January 29, 2011.
  • D'Angelo, Paul (December 2002). "News Framing as a Multiparadigmatic Research Program:A Response to Entman". Journal of Communication. 52 (4): 870–888. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2002.tb02578.x. S2CID 146693414.
  • Donsback, Wolfgang (September 2006). (PDF). Journal of Communication. 54 (4): 589–615. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2006.00294.x. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 20, 2011. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  • Griffin, Emory A. (2006). A First Look at Communication Theory (6 ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780073010182. Retrieved January 29, 2011.
  • Jimenez, Leonarda; Guillem, Susana (August 2009). "Does Communication Studies Have an Identity? Setting the Bases for Contemporary Research". Catalan Journal of Communication and Cultural Studies. 1 (1): 15–27. doi:10.1386/cjcs.1.1.15_1.[permanent dead link]
  • Lindlof, Thomas R.; Taylor, Bryan C. (2002). Qualitative Communication Research Methods (2 ed.). Sage Publications Ltd. ISBN 9780761924944. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  • Littlejohn, Stephen; Foss, Karen (2008). (PDF) (9 ed.). Thomson and Wadsworth. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 14, 2010. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  • Miller, Katherine (2005). Communication Theories:Perspectives, Processes, and Contexts (2 ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780072937947. Retrieved January 29, 2011.
  • Myers, David (May 2001). "A Pox on All Compromises: Reply to Craig(1999)". Communication Theory. 11 (2): 218–230. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.2001.tb00240.x.
  • Penman, Robyn (2000). Reconstructing Communicating: looking to a Future. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. ISBN 9781410605832. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  • Russill, Chris (May 2004). Barton, Richard L.; Bettig, Ronald V.; Nichols, John S.; et al. (eds.). Toward a Pragmatist Theory of Communication (PhD thesis).
  • Russill, Chris (2005). "The road not Taken: William James's Radical Empiricism and Communication". The Communication Review. 8 (3): 277–305. doi:10.1080/10714420500240474. ISSN 1547-7487. S2CID 143442291.

communication, theory, field, 1999, article, robert, craig, attempting, unify, academic, field, communication, theory, craig, argues, that, communication, theorists, become, unified, dialogue, charting, what, calls, dialogical, dialectical, tension, similariti. Communication Theory as a Field is a 1999 article by Robert T Craig attempting to unify the academic field of communication theory 1 2 Craig argues that communication theorists can become unified in dialogue by charting what he calls the dialogical dialectical tension or the similarities and differences in their understanding of communication and demonstrating how those elements create tension within the field 3 Craig mapped these similarities and differences into seven suggested traditions of communication theory and showed how each of these traditions understand communication as well as how each tradition s understanding creates tension with the other traditions 4 The article has received multiple awards 5 6 has become the foundation for many communication theory textbooks 7 8 9 10 11 and has been translated into several different languages 12 13 Communication theory as a field has created two main dialogues between Craig and other theorists Myers argued that Craig misrepresented the theoretical assumptions of his theory and that the theory itself does not distinguish between good and bad theories 14 Craig responded that Myers misunderstood not only the basic argument of the article but also misrepresented his own case study 15 Russill proposed pragmatism as an eighth tradition of communication theory 16 17 Craig responded by expanding this idea and placing Russill s proposition in conversation with the other seven traditions 18 Contents 1 Recognition and awards 2 Metamodel 2 1 Conclusion 3 Response 3 1 Myers constitutive metamodel and truth 3 1 1 Craig s response to Myers 3 2 Russill pragmatism as an eighth tradition 3 2 1 Craig s response to Russill 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesRecognition and awards edit Communication Theory as a Field has been recognized by multiple associations for its influence upon the field of communication These awards include the Best Article Award from the International Communication Association 5 as well as the Golden Anniversary Monograph Award from the National Communication Association 6 That work has since been translated into French 12 and Russian 13 The theory presented in Communication Theory as a Field has become the basis of the book Theorizing Communication which Craig co edited with Heidi Muller 8 as well as being adopted by several other communication theory textbooks as a new framework for understanding the field of communication theory 7 9 10 11 Metamodel editSparked by the Third Debate within the field of International Relations Theory in the 1980s Communication Theory as a Field expanded the conversation regarding disciplinary identity in the field of communication 19 2 20 21 22 23 24 At that time communication theory textbooks had little to no agreement on how to present the field or which theories to include in their textbooks 25 26 This article has since become the foundational framework for four different textbooks to introduce the field of communication 7 8 9 10 11 In this article Craig proposes a vision for communication theory that takes a huge step toward unifying this rather disparate field and addressing its complexities 9 To move toward this unifying vision Craig focused on communication theory as a practical discipline and shows how various traditions of communication theory can be engaged in dialogue on the practice of communication 27 28 In this deliberative process theorists would engage in dialog about the practical implications of communication theories 15 In the end Craig proposes seven different traditions of communication theory and outlines how each one of them would engage the others in dialogue 29 Craig argues that while the study of communication and communication theory has become a rich and flourishing field Communication theory as an identifiable field of study does not yet exist and the field of communication theory has become fragmented into separate domains which simply ignore each other 30 This inability to engage in dialog with one another causes theorists to view communication from isolated viewpoints and denies them the richness that is available when engaging different perspectives 31 Craig argues that communication theorists are all engaging in the study of practical communication 31 By doing so different traditions are able to have a common ground from which a dialog can form albeit each taking a different perspective of communication 31 Through this process of forming a dialog between theorists with different viewpoints on communication communication theory can fully engage with the ongoing practical discourse or metadiscourse about communication in society 31 The communication discipline began not as a single discipline but through many different disciplines independently researching communication 31 This interdisciplinary beginning has separated theorists through their different conceptions of communication rather than unifying them in the common topic of communication 32 Craig argues that the solution to this incoherence in the field of communication is not a unified theory of communication but to create a dialogue between these theorists which engages these differences with one another to create new understandings of communication 33 34 To achieve this dialog Craig proposes what he calls Dialogical Dialectical coherence or a common awareness of certain complementaries and tensions among different types of communication theory 3 Craig believes that the different theories cannot develop in total isolation from one another therefore this dialogical dialectical coherence will provide a set of background assumptions from which different theories can engage each other in productive argumentation 3 Craig argues for a metatheory or second level theory which deals with first level theories about communication 35 This second level metamodel of communication theory would help to understand the differences between first level communication traditions 36 With this thesis in place Craig proposes seven suggested traditions of communication that have emerged and each of which have their own way of understanding communication 37 38 Rhetorical views communication as the practical art of discourse 39 Semiotic views communication as the mediation by signs 40 Phenomenological communication is the experience of dialogue with others 41 Cybernetic communication is the flow of information 42 Socio psychological communication is the interaction of individuals 43 Socio cultural communication is the production and reproduction of the social order 44 Critical communication is the process in which all assumptions can be challenged 45 These proposed seven traditions of communication theory are then placed on two separate tables 46 first to show how each traditions different interpretation of communication defines the tradition s vocabulary communication problems and commonplaces 47 and next to show what argumentation between the traditions would look like 48 Craig then outlines the specifics of each tradition 49 Conclusion edit Craig concluded with an open invitation to explore how the differences in these theories might shed light on key issues show where new traditions could be created and engaging communication theory with communication problems through metadiscourse 50 Craig further proposes several future traditions that could possibly be fit into the metamodel 51 A feminist tradition where communication is theorized as connectedness to others an aesthetic tradition theorizing communication as embodied performance an economic tradition theorizing communication as exchange and a spiritual tradition theorizing communication on a nonmaterial or mystical plane of existence 52 Response editMyers constitutive metamodel and truth edit In 2001 Myers a computer mediated communication scholar from Loyola University New Orleans criticizes Craig s ideas in A Pox on All Compromises A reply to Craig 1999 14 Myers makes two main arguments against Craig s article Myers argues that Craig misrepresents the metamodel and that the lack of any critical truth within Craigs construction is problematic for the field of communication theory 53 18 The metamodel is misrepresented by unjustly arguing that there is a separation between first and second level constitutive models while hiding the paradox within this statement and that it privileges the constitutive model rather than another theoretical conception 54 Next Myers argues that Craig fails to draw any way to discern truth within the theories 55 Using a case study regarding the rise and fall of technological determinism among computer mediated communication scholars 56 Myers argues that a metamodel needs to provide some mechanism that will reduce misrepresentation and mistake in evaluating theory 57 Myers frames Craig s ideas of collective discourse without an evaluative criteria of what is good theory and bad theory as a Mad Hatter s tea party which will allow all to participate in this party of discourse but will not be able to inform any of the participants when it is time to leave 57 Craig s response to Myers edit Craig responded in an almost Jamesian reply 58 that Myers criticisms were not founded in actual inconsistencies within Craigs argument 59 Rather they were founded in the difference between Myers and Craig s respective notions of truth and the proper role of empirical truth as a criterion for adjudicating among theories 59 In regard to Myers first claim that the separation between first level theories and second level metatheory is paradoxical and therefore an inaccurate or misguided distinction Craig admits that there is a paradox inherent within a separation between first order theories and metatheory but slippage between logical levels is an inherent feature or bug of communication and we should not forget that theory is among other things communication 60 Craig cites Gregory Bateson as pointing out that while the theory of logical types forbids the mixing of different levels to avoid paradox practical communication necessarily does exactly that 61 Actual communication is fraught with paradox and while a logicians ideal would have us try and resolve these paradoxes in actual practice we don t because there is no way to do so 61 In actually occurring communication people employ different means of dealing with this paradox but resolving the paradox is not a possible solution 61 Craig argues that Myers has been unable to prove any inconsistency or misrepresentation when it came to using the constitutive model for his metamodel 62 Rather than trying to subvert every other theory to a constitutional model Craig used the constitutive model not for some theory of truth or logical necessity but because the constitutive model pragmatically will accomplish the goal of the project that of opening up a space from which competing theories of communication can interact 60 With this the constitutional model will be able to maintain a theoretical cosmopolitanism 63 On the second argument that the metamodel lacks any empirical truth criteria Craig argues that not only did Myers miss the point of the metamodel by claiming it should evaluate the truth of theories 64 but that Myers own case study fails to back up his point 65 The metamodel itself does not distinguish the falseness of other models 66 However contrary to Myers claim the metamodel does allow theorists engaged in discussion to judge the validity of theories on the basis of empirical evidence in ordinary reasonable ways 66 What the metamodel does deny is a universally established absolute truth in the field of communication theory 67 Craig points out that Myers was correct in that the metamodel is ill equipped to judge theories as valid or invalid it also doesn t do a good job of closing the Antarctic ozone hole or solve other problems for which it was not designed 68 The case study that Myers presents is the debate about technological determinism in the realm of Computer Mediated Communication 56 Craig points out that this debate occurred between social scientific researchers 68 This type of research has a shared commitment to empirical research methods 68 So in spite of already possessing a shared truth criteria these researchers failed to prevent errors Myers hopes would be avoided by holding onto a form of absolute truth 68 This case study would be a good critique of empirical truth but how it supports a critique of the constitutive metamodel is less than apparent 68 By relying upon this case study Myers sabotages his argument for establishing an absolute truth criteria demonstrating that we would gain little by holding on to such a criterion 68 Russill pragmatism as an eighth tradition edit After this exchange between Myers and Craig there was no real disciplinary discussion of the metamodel 69 70 besides textbooks which used the metamodel as a framework for introducing the field 7 8 9 10 11 Then in 2004 in an unpublished dissertation 16 71 which was mentioned in a footnote in his 2005 The road not Taken William James s Radical Empiricism and Communication Theory 17 71 Russill proposed the possibly of pragmatism as an eighth tradition of communication studies 71 72 73 74 This was attempted by using Craig s rules for the requirements of a tradition in communication theory 75 76 58 which Russill formulates as a problem formulation an initial vocabulary and arguments for the plausibility of this viewpoint in relation to prevailing traditions of theory 77 78 Russill did not write his dissertation with the goal of constructing a tradition of communication theory rather he was attempting to resuscitate and reconstruct Dewey s theory of the public as a pragmatist theory of democratic communication 75 79 To accomplish this goal Russill places Dewey in conversation with a variety of theorists including William James John Locke James Carey Michel Foucault Jurgen Habermas and Walter Lippmann among others 75 16 Russill makes the argument that the pragmatist tradition conceptualizes communication in response to the problem of incommensurability 80 Incommensurability being how a pluralistic society can engage in cooperation when there is an absence of common absolute standards for resolving differences 80 Russill briefly attempted to construct a pragmatist tradition of communication only to establish Dewey s theory of the public within that tradition 81 72 To do this he outlines pragmatism as a tradition that identifies the problem formulation as incommensurability and the vocabulary as democracy publics power criticism response ability triple contingency 77 80 Craig s response to Russill edit Craig responds to this in Pragmatism in the Field of Communication Theory and mentions that while Russill does not entirely follow Craig s Rules for a new tradition of communication theory Russill does define a pragmatist tradition in terms of a distinct way of framing the problem of communication and articulates premises that make the tradition theoretically and practically plausible 81 Craig points out that Russill is not the first communication theorists who writes on pragmatism however he is the first to use the constitutive metamodel to define it as a tradition of communication 82 This conception of pragmatism as an eighth tradition of communication studies allows a new space for theories which Craig identified as either ambiguously placed or neglected to immediately snap into focus as contributors to a distinct pragmatic tradition 82 To fully outline a new tradition of communication theory Russill would have had to fully incorporate that tradition within the dialogical dialectical matrix 83 Russill failed to fully consider the full range of criticism which would occur between the Pragmatist tradition and the other traditions of communication 83 Craig uses the dialogical dialectical matrix to outline how pragmatism could be incorporated into the metamodel 84 See also editMeta ethics MetaphilosophyNotes edit Craig 1999 a b Littlejohn amp Foss 2008 pp 6 a b c Craig 1999 pp 124 Craig 1999 pp 132 149 a b International Communication Association Awards PDF International Communication Association 2003 Archived from the original PDF on July 26 2011 Retrieved January 8 2011 a b National Communication Association Awards PDF National Communication Association 2001 Retrieved January 8 2011 a b c d Craig 2007 pp 125 a b c d Craig amp Muller 2007 a b c d e Littlejohn amp Foss 2008 a b c d Griffin 2006 a b c d Miller 2005 a b Craig 2009b a b Craig Robert February 3 2011 Robert Craig Vita PDF University of Colorado Archived from the original PDF on June 12 2010 Retrieved February 21 2011 a b Myers 2001 a b Craig 2001 a b c Russill 2004 a b Russill 2005 a b Craig 2007 Donsback 2006 Penman 2000 Anderson amp Baym 2004 Lindlof amp Taylor 2002 D Angelo 2002 Jimenez amp Guillem 2009 Anderson 1996 pp 200 201 Craig 1999 pp 120 Craig 2006 pp 13 Penman 2000 pp 6 Craig 1999 pp 132 146 Craig 1999 pp 119 120 a b c d e Craig 1999 p 121 Craig 1999 pp 120 123 Craig 1999 pp 123 125 Penman 2000 pp 76 Craig 1999 pp 126 127 Craig 1999 pp 123 132 Anderson amp Baym 2004 pp 440 Craig 1999 pp 132 134 Craig 1999 pp 135 136 Craig 1999 pp 136 138 Craig 1999 pp 138 140 Craig 1999 pp 141 142 Craig 1999 pp 142 144 Craig 1999 pp 144 146 Craig 1999 pp 146 149 Craig 1999 pp 133 134 Craig 1999 pp 132 133 Craig 1999 pp 132 134 Craig 1999 pp 135 149 Craig 1999 pp 149 Craig 1999 pp 149 151 Craig 1999 pp 151 Myers 2001 pp 219 Myers 2001 pp 219 123 226 Myers 2001 pp 222 223 a b Myers 2001 pp 223 226 a b Myers 2001 pp 226 a b Russill 2005 pp 300 a b Craig 2001 pp 232 a b Craig 2001 pp 234 a b c Craig 2001 pp 233 Craig 2001 pp 234 235 Craig 2001 pp 236 Craig 2001 pp 236 237 Craig 2001 pp 236 238 a b Craig 2001 pp 237 Craig 2001 pp 230 a b c d e f Craig 2001 pp 238 Craig 2007 pp 125 126 Craig 2009a pp 7 a b c Craig 2007 pp 126 a b Russill 2004 pp 281 282 Russill 2005 pp 296 298 Craig 2009a a b c Craig 2007 pp 130 Russill 2004 pp 282 a b Russill 2004 pp 281 Craig 2007 pp 133 Russill 2004 pp iii 5 68 105 279 283 a b c Craig 2007 pp 131 a b Craig 2007 pp 130 131 a b Craig 2007 pp 134 a b Craig 2007 pp 135 Craig 2007 pp 135 137 References editAnderson John Arthur 1996 Communication Theory Epistemological Foundations Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 57230 083 5 Retrieved February 2 2011 Anderson James A Baym Geoffrey December 2004 Philosophies and Philosophic Issues in Communication 1995 2004 Journal of Communication 55 4 437 448 doi 10 1111 j 1460 2466 2004 tb02647 x Craig Robert T May 1999 Communication Theory as a Field PDF Communication Theory 9 2 119 161 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2885 1999 tb00355 x Retrieved January 8 2011 Craig Robert T May 2001 Minding My Metamodel Mending Myers Communication Theory 11 2 231 240 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2885 2001 tb00241 x Craig Robert T May 2007 Pragmatism in the Field of Communication Theory Communication Theory 2007 17 125 145 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2885 2007 00292 x Craig Robert 2006 A Path Through the Methodological Divides PDF KEIO Communication Review 28 9 17 Retrieved January 8 2011 Craig Robert T 2009a Reflection on Communication Theory as a Field PDF Revue internationale de communication sociale et publique 2 7 12 doi 10 4000 communiquer 346 Retrieved January 29 2011 Craig Robert T 2009b La communication en tant que champ d etudes PDF Revue internationale de communication sociale et publique 1 1 42 Retrieved January 8 2011 Craig Robert Muller Heidi eds April 2007 Theorizing Communication Readings Across the Traditions SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 4129 5237 8 Retrieved January 29 2011 D Angelo Paul December 2002 News Framing as a Multiparadigmatic Research Program A Response to Entman Journal of Communication 52 4 870 888 doi 10 1111 j 1460 2466 2002 tb02578 x S2CID 146693414 Donsback Wolfgang September 2006 The Identity of Communication Research PDF Journal of Communication 54 4 589 615 doi 10 1111 j 1460 2466 2006 00294 x Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2011 Retrieved January 28 2011 Griffin Emory A 2006 A First Look at Communication Theory 6 ed McGraw Hill ISBN 9780073010182 Retrieved January 29 2011 Jimenez Leonarda Guillem Susana August 2009 Does Communication Studies Have an Identity Setting the Bases for Contemporary Research Catalan Journal of Communication and Cultural Studies 1 1 15 27 doi 10 1386 cjcs 1 1 15 1 permanent dead link Lindlof Thomas R Taylor Bryan C 2002 Qualitative Communication Research Methods 2 ed Sage Publications Ltd ISBN 9780761924944 Retrieved January 28 2011 Littlejohn Stephen Foss Karen 2008 Theories of Human Communication PDF 9 ed Thomson and Wadsworth Archived from the original PDF on December 14 2010 Retrieved January 23 2011 Miller Katherine 2005 Communication Theories Perspectives Processes and Contexts 2 ed McGraw Hill ISBN 9780072937947 Retrieved January 29 2011 Myers David May 2001 A Pox on All Compromises Reply to Craig 1999 Communication Theory 11 2 218 230 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2885 2001 tb00240 x Penman Robyn 2000 Reconstructing Communicating looking to a Future Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc ISBN 9781410605832 Retrieved January 28 2011 Russill Chris May 2004 Barton Richard L Bettig Ronald V Nichols John S et al eds Toward a Pragmatist Theory of Communication PhD thesis Russill Chris 2005 The road not Taken William James s Radical Empiricism and Communication The Communication Review 8 3 277 305 doi 10 1080 10714420500240474 ISSN 1547 7487 S2CID 143442291 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Communication Theory as a Field amp oldid 1189873599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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