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  1. A Communication Perspective on the Military
    Interactions, Messages, and Discourses
    Contributor: Sahlstein Parcell, Erin (Publisher); Webb, Lynne M. (Publisher)
    Published: 2014; ©2015
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers, New York

    Bayerische Staatsbibliothek
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
    Export to reference management software   RIS file
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    Content information
    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Sahlstein Parcell, Erin (Publisher); Webb, Lynne M. (Publisher)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781453915622
    Other identifier:
    9781453915622
    RVK Categories: AP 14100 ; AP 19810
    Edition: 1st, New ed
    Subjects: Diskurs; Frame <Journalismus>; Militär; Krieg; Familie; Militärischer Einsatz; Kriegsberichterstattung; Massenmedien; Soldat; Kommunikation; Psychische Belastung; Rhetorik
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (464 Seiten)
    Notes:

    Online resource; title from title screen (viewed June 10, 2019)

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media - old and new - render the costs of war meaningful? How is the narrative of war rhetorically constructed? The dynamics of military family transactions, media-military relations, and war rhetoric reveal, reinforce, and may even disrupt U.S. war culture. Offering close analysis and thoughtful critique, this book reflects upon the ways the meaning of war is communicated in private lives, social relations, and public affairs. The collection highlights three broad areas of concern: communication in the military family; the military in the media; and rhetoric surrounding the military. Katheryn Maguire, Roger Stahl, and Gordon Mitchell introduce each section with overarching and integrative literature reviews that offer directions for the field. Each section includes six chapters reporting the latest research and offering suggestions for practical applications. The book is a must-have reference for military and communication scholars and an ideal text for graduate seminars and upper division undergraduate courses focusing on communication and the military

    «A Communication Perspective on the Military provides one of the first comprehensive studies of the communicative dimensions of military relationships, martial theories, and military practices. This insightful book extends the work of humanists and social scientists who investigate the unique challenges that confront military families and other communities who must cope with the mediated coverage of wars as well as other military rhetorics. I anticipate that in the coming years this book will be considered 'must' reading for those who will soon be preparing syllabi for courses in military communication, critical security studies, and strategic military communication.» (Marouf Arif Hasian, University of Utah) «Given the powerful pull of militarism in our current culture and the centrality of communication practices and technologies to military operations, not enough attention has been paid to military communication.

    Fortunately, A Communication Perspective on the Military brings the full force of the communication discipline to bear upon this inherently fraught and difficult-to-manage terrain. The volume succeeds in drawing together a wide array of theoretical and methodological traditions to expand and inform the collective conversation in which we should all participate. Sahlstein Parcell and Webb prove that beginning such a complex international discussion should start with serious intellectual investigation. » (Jeremy Packer, University of Toronto) «Sahlstein Parcell and Webb have produced the most comprehensive collection of essays and empirical studies on communication and the military that our discipline has seen to date - works that are timely, theoretically grounded, and rich with exemplars. The editors bring together scholars from several areas of the communication discipline (e.g., family communication, media studies, rhetoric) whose research explores the military.

    Too often these areas of scholarship are read in isolation from each other, but this volume illustrates the potential for creating points of intersections between them.» (Steven R. Wilson, Purdue University)

  2. A Communication Perspective on the Military
    Interactions, Messages, and Discourses
    Contributor: Parcell, Erin Sahlstein (HerausgeberIn); Webb, Lynne M. (HerausgeberIn)
    Published: 2015
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers, New York

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media – old and new – render the... more

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Potsdamer Straße
    No inter-library loan

     

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media – old and new – render the costs of war meaningful? How is the narrative of war rhetorically constructed?The dynamics of military family transactions, media-military relations, and war rhetoric reveal, reinforce, and may even disrupt U.S. war culture. Offering close analysis and thoughtful critique, this book reflects upon the ways the meaning of war is communicated in private lives, social relations, and public affairs. The collection highlights three broad areas of concern: communication in the military family; the military in the media; and rhetoric surrounding the military. Katheryn Maguire, Roger Stahl, and Gordon Mitchell introduce each section with overarching and integrative literature reviews that offer directions for the field. Each section includes six chapters reporting the latest research and offering suggestions for practical applications. The book is a must-have reference for military and communication scholars and an ideal text for graduate seminars and upper division undergraduate courses focusing on communication and the military «A Communication Perspective on the Military provides one of the first comprehensive studies of the communicative dimensions of military relationships, martial theories, and military practices. This insightful book extends the work of humanists and social scientists who investigate the unique challenges that confront military families and other communities who must cope with the mediated coverage of wars as well as other military rhetorics. I anticipate that in the coming years this book will be considered ‘must’ reading for those who will soon be preparing syllabi for courses in military communication, critical security studies, and strategic military communication.»(Marouf Arif Hasian, University of Utah)«Given the powerful pull of militarism in our current culture and the centrality of communication practices and technologies to military operations, not enough attention has been paid to military communication. Fortunately, A Communication Perspective on the Military brings the full force of the communication discipline to bear upon this inherently fraught and difficult-to-manage terrain. The volume succeeds in drawing together a wide array of theoretical and methodological traditions to expand and inform the collective conversation in which we should all participate. Sahlstein Parcell and Webb prove that beginning such a complex international discussion should start with serious intellectual investigation. »(Jeremy Packer, University of Toronto)«Sahlstein Parcell and Webb have produced the most comprehensive collection of essays and empirical studies on communication and the military that our discipline has seen to date – works that are timely, theoretically grounded, and rich with exemplars. The editors bring together scholars from several areas of the communication discipline (e.g., family communication, media studies, rhetoric) whose research explores the military. Too often these areas of scholarship are read in isolation from each other, but this volume illustrates the potential for creating points of intersections between them.»(Steven R. Wilson, Purdue University) Contents: Robert L. Ivie: Telling the Stories of the War State – Erin Sahlstein Parcell: Research at the Intersections of the Military and Communication: A Preview and Review – Katheryn C. Maguire: Military Family Communication: A Review and Synthesis of the Research Related to Wartime Deployment – Leanne K. Knobloch/Jennifer A. Theiss/Erin C. Wehrman: Communication of Military Couples During Deployment: Topic Avoidance and Relational Uncertainty – Candee B. Berck/Lynne M. Webb: Enacting Resistance: Military Parents’ Reports of Successful Communication With Children During Deployment – Emily M. Cramer/Kelly E. Tenzek/Mike Allen: Spirituality, Social Support, and the Communicative Role of the Chaplain in Veteran Populations – Andrew C. High/Victoria Jennings-Kelsall/Denise H. Solomon/Amy D. Marshall: Military Families Online: Seeking and Providing Support Through Internet Discussion Boards – Michelle Still Mehta/Jane Jorgenson: Work-family Predicaments of Air Force Wives: A Sensemaking Perspective – Sarah Symonds LeBlanc/Loreen N. Olson: Communicating Identity: The Impact of Veterans’ Identity Negotiation on Family Communication – Roger Stahl: Media and the Military: The Full Spectrum? – Kenneth S. Sexton: The «Experiment» of the Tuskegee Airmen as Reported in Two Competing African-American Newspapers, 1940-1944 – Paul Achter: Reluctant Conquests: Media Events and the End of the Iraq War – John W. Howard, III/Laura C. Prividera: Nationalism and Soldiers’ Health: Media Framing of Soldiers’ Returns From Deployments – Kevin Coe: Honoring the Dead, Supporting the War: Media Eulogies and the Possibilities of Patriotic Discourse – Michel M. Haigh/Michael Pfau: Examining the Content of Milblogs and Their Influence on Public Support for War – Lisa E. Silvestri: Always on Duty: Managing U.S. Marines on Social Media – Gordon R. Mitchell: Necessity and Possibility in Military Rhetoric – Tracey Quigley Holden: Riding an American Nightmare: Generals Moseley and MacArthur, Men on Horseback – Anne Gerbensky-Kerber/Benjamin R. Bates: Freedom From Fat Is Freedom to Fight: A Foucauldian Reading of Mission: Readiness’ Rhetoric – Derek Foster: The War of Words Commemorating Canada’s War Dead: Rhetoric and the «Highway of Heroes» – Stephen A. Klien: Cinematic Simulacra and the Prospect for Public Agency: Constructing the Citizen-Soldier in Post-9/11 War Films – Bryan T. Walsh: Forgetting Histories of Toxic Military Violence: The Case of the Kelly Air Force Base – Anna M. (Amy) Young/Pauline Kaurin: The Myth of the Warrior: Rhetorics of Masculinity and Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
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    Content information
    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Contributor: Parcell, Erin Sahlstein (HerausgeberIn); Webb, Lynne M. (HerausgeberIn)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781453915622
    Other identifier:
    9781453915622
    RVK Categories: AP 14100 ; AP 19810
    Subjects: USA; Militär; Soldat; Familie; Kommunikation; Militärischer Einsatz; ; USA; Massenmedien; Kriegsberichterstattung; Frame <Journalismus>; ; USA; Militär; Krieg; Diskurs; Rhetorik;
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 448 pages)
  3. A Communication Perspective on the Military
    Interactions, Messages, and Discourses
    Contributor: Parcell, Erin Sahlstein (HerausgeberIn); Webb, Lynne M. (HerausgeberIn)
    Published: 2015
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers, New York

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media – old and new – render the... more

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan

     

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media – old and new – render the costs of war meaningful? How is the narrative of war rhetorically constructed?The dynamics of military family transactions, media-military relations, and war rhetoric reveal, reinforce, and may even disrupt U.S. war culture. Offering close analysis and thoughtful critique, this book reflects upon the ways the meaning of war is communicated in private lives, social relations, and public affairs. The collection highlights three broad areas of concern: communication in the military family; the military in the media; and rhetoric surrounding the military. Katheryn Maguire, Roger Stahl, and Gordon Mitchell introduce each section with overarching and integrative literature reviews that offer directions for the field. Each section includes six chapters reporting the latest research and offering suggestions for practical applications. The book is a must-have reference for military and communication scholars and an ideal text for graduate seminars and upper division undergraduate courses focusing on communication and the military «A Communication Perspective on the Military provides one of the first comprehensive studies of the communicative dimensions of military relationships, martial theories, and military practices. This insightful book extends the work of humanists and social scientists who investigate the unique challenges that confront military families and other communities who must cope with the mediated coverage of wars as well as other military rhetorics. I anticipate that in the coming years this book will be considered ‘must’ reading for those who will soon be preparing syllabi for courses in military communication, critical security studies, and strategic military communication.»(Marouf Arif Hasian, University of Utah)«Given the powerful pull of militarism in our current culture and the centrality of communication practices and technologies to military operations, not enough attention has been paid to military communication. Fortunately, A Communication Perspective on the Military brings the full force of the communication discipline to bear upon this inherently fraught and difficult-to-manage terrain. The volume succeeds in drawing together a wide array of theoretical and methodological traditions to expand and inform the collective conversation in which we should all participate. Sahlstein Parcell and Webb prove that beginning such a complex international discussion should start with serious intellectual investigation. »(Jeremy Packer, University of Toronto)«Sahlstein Parcell and Webb have produced the most comprehensive collection of essays and empirical studies on communication and the military that our discipline has seen to date – works that are timely, theoretically grounded, and rich with exemplars. The editors bring together scholars from several areas of the communication discipline (e.g., family communication, media studies, rhetoric) whose research explores the military. Too often these areas of scholarship are read in isolation from each other, but this volume illustrates the potential for creating points of intersections between them.»(Steven R. Wilson, Purdue University) Contents: Robert L. Ivie: Telling the Stories of the War State – Erin Sahlstein Parcell: Research at the Intersections of the Military and Communication: A Preview and Review – Katheryn C. Maguire: Military Family Communication: A Review and Synthesis of the Research Related to Wartime Deployment – Leanne K. Knobloch/Jennifer A. Theiss/Erin C. Wehrman: Communication of Military Couples During Deployment: Topic Avoidance and Relational Uncertainty – Candee B. Berck/Lynne M. Webb: Enacting Resistance: Military Parents’ Reports of Successful Communication With Children During Deployment – Emily M. Cramer/Kelly E. Tenzek/Mike Allen: Spirituality, Social Support, and the Communicative Role of the Chaplain in Veteran Populations – Andrew C. High/Victoria Jennings-Kelsall/Denise H. Solomon/Amy D. Marshall: Military Families Online: Seeking and Providing Support Through Internet Discussion Boards – Michelle Still Mehta/Jane Jorgenson: Work-family Predicaments of Air Force Wives: A Sensemaking Perspective – Sarah Symonds LeBlanc/Loreen N. Olson: Communicating Identity: The Impact of Veterans’ Identity Negotiation on Family Communication – Roger Stahl: Media and the Military: The Full Spectrum? – Kenneth S. Sexton: The «Experiment» of the Tuskegee Airmen as Reported in Two Competing African-American Newspapers, 1940-1944 – Paul Achter: Reluctant Conquests: Media Events and the End of the Iraq War – John W. Howard, III/Laura C. Prividera: Nationalism and Soldiers’ Health: Media Framing of Soldiers’ Returns From Deployments – Kevin Coe: Honoring the Dead, Supporting the War: Media Eulogies and the Possibilities of Patriotic Discourse – Michel M. Haigh/Michael Pfau: Examining the Content of Milblogs and Their Influence on Public Support for War – Lisa E. Silvestri: Always on Duty: Managing U.S. Marines on Social Media – Gordon R. Mitchell: Necessity and Possibility in Military Rhetoric – Tracey Quigley Holden: Riding an American Nightmare: Generals Moseley and MacArthur, Men on Horseback – Anne Gerbensky-Kerber/Benjamin R. Bates: Freedom From Fat Is Freedom to Fight: A Foucauldian Reading of Mission: Readiness’ Rhetoric – Derek Foster: The War of Words Commemorating Canada’s War Dead: Rhetoric and the «Highway of Heroes» – Stephen A. Klien: Cinematic Simulacra and the Prospect for Public Agency: Constructing the Citizen-Soldier in Post-9/11 War Films – Bryan T. Walsh: Forgetting Histories of Toxic Military Violence: The Case of the Kelly Air Force Base – Anna M. (Amy) Young/Pauline Kaurin: The Myth of the Warrior: Rhetorics of Masculinity and Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file
    Content information
    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Contributor: Parcell, Erin Sahlstein (HerausgeberIn); Webb, Lynne M. (HerausgeberIn)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781453915622
    Other identifier:
    9781453915622
    RVK Categories: AP 14100 ; AP 19810
    Subjects: USA; Militär; Soldat; Familie; Kommunikation; Militärischer Einsatz; ; USA; Massenmedien; Kriegsberichterstattung; Frame <Journalismus>; ; USA; Militär; Krieg; Diskurs; Rhetorik;
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 448 pages)
  4. A Communication Perspective on the Military
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Inc., New York ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media – old and new – render the... more

    Access:
    Universitätsbibliothek Gießen
    No inter-library loan

     

    A Communication Perspective on the Military brings into focus the challenge of sense-making in the war state. How do military family members talk to one another about the stress of deployment on their lives? How do media – old and new – render the costs of war meaningful? How is the narrative of war rhetorically constructed? The dynamics of military family transactions, media-military relations, and war rhetoric reveal, reinforce, and may even disrupt U.S. war culture. Offering close analysis and thoughtful critique, this book reflects upon the ways the meaning of war is communicated in private lives, social relations, and public affairs. The collection highlights three broad areas of concern: communication in the military family; the military in the media; and rhetoric surrounding the military. Katheryn Maguire, Roger Stahl, and Gordon Mitchell introduce each section with overarching and integrative literature reviews that offer directions for the field. Each section includes six chapters reporting the latest research and offering suggestions for practical applications. The book is a must-have reference for military and communication scholars and an ideal text for graduate seminars and upper division undergraduate courses focusing on communication and the military. «A Communication Perspective on the Military provides one of the first comprehensive studies of the communicative dimensions of military relationships, martial theories, and military practices. This insightful book extends the work of humanists and social scientists who investigate the unique challenges that confront military families and other communities who must cope with the mediated coverage of wars as well as other military rhetorics. I anticipate that in the coming years this book will be considered ‘must’ reading for those who will soon be preparing syllabi for courses in military communication, critical security studies, and strategic military communication.» (Marouf Arif Hasian, University of Utah) «Given the powerful pull of militarism in our current culture and the centrality of communication practices and technologies to military operations, not enough attention has been paid to military communication. Fortunately, A Communication Perspective on the Military brings the full force of the communication discipline to bear upon this inherently fraught and difficult-to-manage terrain. The volume succeeds in drawing together a wide array of theoretical and methodological traditions to expand and inform the collective conversation in which we should all participate. Sahlstein Parcell and Webb prove that beginning such a complex international discussion should start with serious intellectual investigation. » (Jeremy Packer, University of Toronto) «Sahlstein Parcell and Webb have produced the most comprehensive collection of essays and empirical studies on communication and the military that our discipline has seen to date – works that are timely, theoretically grounded, and rich with exemplars. The editors bring together scholars from several areas of the communication discipline (e.g., family communication, media studies, rhetoric) whose research explores the military. Too often these areas of scholarship are read in isolation from each other, but this volume illustrates the potential for creating points of intersections between them.» (Steven R. Wilson, Purdue University)...

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file
    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Webb, Lynne M.
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781453915622
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 300
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Subjects: Militär; Soldat; Familie; Kommunikation; Militärischer Einsatz; Psychische Belastung; Massenmedien; Kriegsberichterstattung; Frame <Journalismus>; Krieg; Diskurs; Rhetorik
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
  5. A communication perspective on the military
    interactions, messages, and discourses
  6. A Communication Perspective on the Military
    Interactions, Messages, and Discourses