In this classic text, James W. Carey maintains that
communication is not merely the transmission of information;
reminding the reader of the link between the words "communication"
and "community," he broadens his definition to include the
drawing-together of a people that is culture. In this context,
Carey questions the American tradition of focusing only on mass
communication's function as a means of social and political
control, and makes a case for examining the content of a
communication?the meaning of symbols, not only the motives that
originate them or the purposes they serve. He seeks to recast the
goal of communication studies, replacing the search for
deterministic laws of behavior with a simpler, yet far more
challenging mission: "to enlarge the human conversation by
comprehending what others are saying."
This new edition includes a new critical foreword by G. Stuart
Adam that explains Carey's fundamental role in transforming the
study of mass communication to include a cultural perspective and
connects his classic essays with contemporary media issues and
trends. This edition also adds a new, complete bibliography of all
of Carey's writings.
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