Communication and the Economy
History, Value and Agency
Gronbeck, Bruce / McKinney, Mitchell S. / Hanan, Joshua S. / Hayward, Mark
Erschienen am
29.10.2013
Beschreibung
This collection brings together established and emerging scholars in communication studies to examine the relationship between communication and the economy in contemporary society. Through concrete case studies and theoretically informed essays, the chapters explore a range of important disciplinary topics – from the rhetoric of economics to the role of language in mediating financial crises.
Autorenportrait
(PhD, University of Texas–Austin) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at the University of Denver. Mark Hayward (PhD, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at York University.
Inhalt
Contents: Mark Hayward: Political Economy and Cultural Studies: Methodological Reflections on The Economic in U.S. Communication Studies – Sarah E. Dempsey/David Carlone: Autonomist Marxism and the Contributions of Generative Dialogue – Joshua S. Hanan: From Economic Rhetoric to Economic Imaginaries: A Critical Genealogy of Economic Rhetoric in U.S. Communication Studies – James Arnt Aune: From Corax to Coase: Rhetoric and Rational Choice Theory – Michael Kaplan: The Communicative Efficacy of Markets – Jodi Dean: Communicative Capitalism: This is What Democracy Looks Like – Richard Maxwell/Toby Miller: Books: Culture, Economy, Environment – Catherine Chaput: The Rhetorical Situation and the Battle for Public Sentiment: How Friedman Overtook Galbraith at the Dawn of Neoliberalism – Pamela Conners/Ryan Solomon: The Business of School Board Deliberation – Nneka Logan/M. Lane Bruner: The Supreme Court and Money as Speech: A Rhetorical Analysis of Landmark Corporate Speech Rights Rulings – Ronald Walter Greene/Sara Holiday Nelson: Struggle for the Commons: Communicative Labor, Control Economics, and the Rhetorical Marketplace – Nico Mouton/Sine N. Just: Deceiving Knaves or Deluded Fools? Communication as a Cause of the Financial Crisis – Mark Hayward/Joshua S. Hanan: Afterword: Where are We Now? Historicizing Contemporary Research on the Economy in Communication Studies.