The Fantastic Growth of Communication Research Since the 1950s But For What?

Similar documents
New/Old Theory in Media/Cultural Studies

Communication and Media Studies, History to 1968

POLITICAL SCIENCE. PS 0200 AMERICAN POLITICS 3 cr. PS 0211 AMERICAN SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE 3 cr. PS 0300 COMPARATIVE POLITICS 3 cr.

DEMOGRAPHICS IN CANADIAN SOCIETY. Unit 2

POLITICAL SCIENCE. PS 0200 AMERICAN POLITICAL PROCESS 3 cr. PS 0211 AMERICAN SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE 3 cr. PS 0300 COMPARATIVE POLITICS 3 cr.

ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING DEGREES ARTS & HUMANITIES / SOCIAL SCIENCES BULLETIN ELECTIVES

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS)

First Nine Weeks-August 20-October 23, 2014

Chapter 1: What is sociology?

A Complete List of Eligible Elective Courses Outside of the English Department

B.A. IN HISTORY. B.A. in History 1. Topics in European History Electives from history courses 7-11

Bachelor of Arts in Political Science

SOCI 221 Basic Concepts in Sociology

Preface. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Editor

COMMRC 3326: Seminar in Media Studies Foundations of American Media Theory Thursday, 5:30-8: CL Fall 2012

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS)

The long passage of history: The evolution of professionalism among journalists and their international contacts

Issues & Controversies

Compare historical periods in terms of differing political, social, religious, and economic issues

International Affairs

From NWICO to WSIS. A Historical Perspective. Peixi Xu Associate Professor The Communication University of China

Course Descriptions 1201 Politics: Contemporary Issues 1210 Political Ideas: Isms and Beliefs 1220 Political Analysis 1230 Law and Politics

POLITICS and POLITICS MAJOR. Hendrix Catalog

IS - International Studies

Political Science and Diplomacy

Conceptualizing and Measuring Justice: Links between Academic Research and Practical Applications

Political Science. Political Science 481. Program Description

History/Social Science Standards (ISBE) Section Social Science A Common Core of Standards 1

General. The International Federation of Catholic Universities Universities at the core of our commitment since 1924 ORIGINS

Lecturer: Dr. Dan-Bright S. Dzorgbo, UG Contact Information:

SAMPLE Course Clusters

Biographical Overview - Lloyd S. Etheredge

ILLINOIS LICENSURE TESTING SYSTEM

The Scope of Interdisciplinary Collaboration

College of Arts and Sciences. Political Science

Chapter 1 The Sociological Perspective. Putting Social Life Into Perspective. The sociological imagination is: Definition of Sociology:

Bachelor of Arts in History

POLI 111: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

this social science discipline looks at the development and structure of human society and how it works (Bain, Colyer, DesRiveires, & Dolan,2002)

Fall Ø Course materials p p User name: p Password: panlaoshi. Chapter 1

2008 World History I History and Social Science Standards of Learning STANDARD

ILLINOIS LICENSURE TESTING SYSTEM

POLITICAL SCIENCE (PS)

SENIOR 4: WESTERN CIVILIZATION HISTORICAL REVIEW OF ITS DEVELOPMENT (OPTIONAL)

GRADE 7 Contemporary Cultures: 1600 to the Present

Department of Social Sciences 2017/2018

ANTH 432 Human Rights ANTH 435 US Mexico Border ANTH 461* Urban Anthropology (216) ANTH 463 The social roots of health and disease ANTH 475

Persuasion and Influence

PSC-Political Science Courses

GRADE 10 5/31/02 WHEN THIS WAS TAUGHT: MAIN/GENERAL TOPIC: WHAT THE STUDENTS WILL KNOW OR BE ABLE TO DO: COMMENTS:

Essentials of International Relations Eight Edition Chapter 1: Approaches to International Relations LECTURE SLIDES

International Studies

Department of Mechanical and Civil Engineering Arts and Humanities/Social Sciences (H/SS) Electives

POLS - Political Science

HIS 112 World Civilization II

New German Critique and Duke University Press are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to New German Critique.

College of Arts and Sciences. Political Science

International Studies

THE U.S.-CHINA POWER SHIFT

Big Picture for Grade 12. Government

NATIONAL PLAN FOR THE ALLIANCE OF CIVILIZATIONS

The changing face of Britain

LESSON TITLE SOCIAL STUDIES STANDARDS ELA STANDARDS

1 ST CODESRIA/CASB SUMMER SCHOOL IN AFRICAN STUDIES

WIKIPEDIA IS NOT A GOOD ENOUGH SOURCE FOR AN ACADEMIC ASSIGNMENT

AP European History Month Content/Essential Questions Skills/Activities Resources Assessments Standards/Anchors

CREATING A NEW SUBJECT

REPORT BY THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL COUNCIL ON THE ACTIVITIES OF THE MANAGEMENT OF SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONS (MOST) PROGRAMME IN OUTLINE

Course Descriptions Political Science

From Paris to Sofia: Eight years of efforts to foster media independence and pluralism and to promote press freedom

Great Political Theories V.2: A Comprehensive Selection Of The Crucial Ideas In Political Philosophy From The French Revolution To Modern Times

Sociology. Sociology 1

Arizona Educator Proficiency Assessments (AEPA ) FIELD 06: POLITICAL SCIENCE/AMERICAN GOVERNMENT TEST OBJECTIVES

Department of Integrated Engineering Arts and Humanities/Social Sciences (H/SS) Electives

Propose solutions to challenges brought on by modern industrialization and globalization.

Note: Principal version Equivalence list Modification Complete version from 1 October 2014 Master s Programme Sociology: Social and Political Theory

LIFESTYLE OF VIETNAMESE WORKERS IN THE CONTEXT OF INDUSTRIALIZATION

SOC 203Y1Y History of Social Theory. SS 2117 (Sidney Smith Hall), 100 St. George Street

Correlations to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS): Student Material

he World Digital Library

Political Science. Political Science-1. Faculty: Ball, Chair; Fair, Koch, Lowi, Potter, Sullivan

Workshop Title: Democracy and Religion

Correlation to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) United States Government

Amarillo ISD Social Studies Curriculum

GCS Concentration Course Lists. (Summer 2015, subject to continual updating)

Transforming Trade Berlin, Germany, 15 October 2018

Groups Change but Community Stays the Same

(UN)MAKING EUROPE: REPORT ON THE 13 TH CONFERENCE OF THE EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION (29 TH AUGUST 1 ST SEPTEMBER 2017, ATHENS)

Intercultural and Interreligious context of Media Information & Literacy

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

American Ethnic Studies

Recommendation Rec (2002) 12 of the Committee of Ministers to member states on education for democratic citizenship

Test Blueprint. Course Name: World History Florida DOE Number: Grade Level: 9-12 Content Area: Social Studies. Moderate Complexity.

History. History. 1 Major & 2 Minors School of Arts and Sciences Department of History/Geography/Politics

MEDIA COMMUNICATION: UNIFORMITY OR CULTURAL DIVERSITY?

Study of the Impact of Social Media Technologies on Political Consciousness: Specifics of Russian Approaches

European History

A Flawed Peace. Standards Alignment Reading Text Analytical Questions Response Sheets

Required Text Friedrich D., Law in Our Lives: An Introduction 2 Ed; Oxford University Press TABLE OF CONTENTS

F A C U L T Y STUDY PROGRAMME FOR POSTGRADUATE STUDIES

Transcription:

The Fantastic Growth of Communication Research Since the 1950s But For What? Kaarle Nordenstreng Professor Emeritus, University of Tampere, Finland Keynote lecture at international conference 50 Years of Communication Research in Local and Global Contexts Cairo, 13-15 December 2011

Outline of the presentation 1. Growth of the field in numbers 2. History before the 1960s 3. Developments since the 1950s 4. Associations: national, international, regional 5. What has the field achieved? 6. What should be done?

Growth of the Infocom researchers in France

Relative increase in students of communication-media field in comparison to other fields of humanities and total student population in Germany

Members of the American Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)

The field here means research on Mainly mass communication including journalism, press, radio, television, film and the public spheres they facilitate Not speech, organizational communication, PR, advertising or other institutions facilitated by non-mass communication Internet-based social communication emerged as new area falling both within and outside public communication Let s now rehearse its history, first before the 1960s

Forefathers in USA Political scientist Harold Lasswell Sociologist Paul Lazarsfeld Psychologist Carl Hovland Social psychologist Kurt Lewin Other North American traditions Chicago school (John Dewey Walter Lippmann) Frankfurt school (Theodore Adorno, Eric Fromm et al) Toronto school (Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan)

Marshall McLuhan (Toronto, April 1967)

Forefathers in Europe Communication and change: Karl Marx (1818 1883) Nerves of society: Albert Schäffle (1831 1903) News of society: Karl Knies (1821 1898) Press as commerce: Karl Bücher (1848 1930) Mirrors of society: Ferdinand Tönnies (1855 1936) Consciousness of society: Max Weber (1864 1920) Other European traditions Germany: Zeitungswissenschaft, Publizistik (Dovifat) France: Filmologie, structuralism (Barthes) Britain: Cultural studies (Williams, Hall)

Prehistory Enlightenment and democracy with freedom of opinion and press, public debate (18 th Century) Catholic church propaganda (17 th C) Greece philosophers Plato, Aristotle (3-4 th C BC) Chinese philosopher Confucius (5 th C BC) Arab and Persian cultures

Development since the 1950s Media and its study becomes popular as shown above Media and the field turns political: Lerner (1950-55), UNESCO (1970-80s), WSIS (2003-05) The field gets diversified - by focus: production, content, audience - by approach: social scientific, political economy, cultural studies Let s now recall cases of the field turning political

Lerner in Preface to the paperback edition (1964) A decade of effort went into the studies from which this book was made. Another half decade has passed since the book appeared. These fifteen years have witnessed the passing of traditional society from every continent. No area of the world has resisted the attractions, despite the increasingly evident risks, of modernization. The emerging nations have hastened to become new states and emulate the ways of modern societies. Haste has made waste; risks have turned into losses. The want: get ratio has been upset since people have learned to want for more than they can get. As a result, the revolution of rising expectations we celebrated so confidently fifteen years ago has, in many places, become a revolution of rising frustrations. Modernization is harder than one supposed

16.12.2011 World Summit on Information Society Geneva 2003 & Tunis 2005 32

Let s now turn to the field getting diversified as demonstrated by samples of scholarly journals dominated by American publishers and English language contemporary books international association sections and interest groups

Top 20 countries of authors in 43 journals 1: Number of articles 2: Share of articles 3: ICA conference attendance 4: Population size 5: Visibility correlation

Sections & interest groups in associations focus on Audience Community Education Environment Ethnicity and race Gender Health History Intercultural & international Interpersonal & speech Islam Journalism

Sections & interest groups, cont. Law and policy Management and economics Organizations Philosophy Political economy Politics Popular culture Production Public relations Religion Sports Visual culture

Associations reflect and consolidate the field nationally, regionally & internationally National associations in speech and journalism studies since the 1910s International association in communication and media pushed by UNESCO since 1946 International Association for Mass Communication Research (IAMCR) in 1957 Regional cenres and associations in Asia (AMIC) and Latin America (CIESPAL) in the late 1960s

International Association for Mass Communication Research (IAMCR) founding fathers in late 1957, when IAMCR was founded From the left: Francesco Fattorello (Italy), Fernand Terrou (France), Evgeniy Khudyakov (USSR), Jacques Leaute (France) and Mieczyslaw Kafel (Poland).

What has the field achieved? Contributed to modernization plus post industrial, postmodern society and globalization Constructed the hubris of media independence and Information Society Integrated social sciences and humanities while delinking from their roots Created interdisciplinary specialities highlighting new phenomena and canonizing them The expanded field became more and more differentiated, with new media & Internet boosting specialities, which easily gained the status of another major subject and discipline in the academic nomenclature

What should be done? It is deceptive to celebrate popularity of the field with the distinction of new disciplines Be open to novelties but do not let them carry you to a surfing syndrome whereby one eclectically combines features without in depth analysis With such a trend the field is both losing its healthy roots to basic disciplines (sociology, political science, lingusitics, literature, etc) and it is also turning more and more dependent on empirical and practical aspects of reality typically applied research serving exisiting institutions, i.e. administrative instead of critical research

Respect diversity but not at the expense of coherence I call for serious soul searching and critical examination of the identity of the field, by studying the history of ideas in the field to understand how communication and media study has evolved and how it relates to other fields of inquiry pursuing research on research to deal with the concepts of communication and mediation in relation to the system of sciences Welcome to fascinating realm of self reflection of the field!

Thank you! kaarle.nordenstreng@uta.fi http://www.uta.fi/cmt/en/contact/staff/kaarlenordenstreng/index.html