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Critical Intercultural Communication Pedagogy constructs a
theoretical frame through which critical intercultural
communication pedagogy can be dreamed, envisioned, and realized as
praxis. Its chapters provide answers to questions surrounding the
relationship of intercultural communication pedagogy to critical
race theory, queer theory, critical ethnography, and narrative
methodology, among others. Utilizing a diverse array of theoretical
and methodological approaches within critical intercultural
communication research, this collection is creatively engaging,
theoretically innovating, and pedagogically encouraging.
Latina/o/x Communication Studies: Theories, Methods, and Practice
spotlights contemporary Latina/o/x Communication Studies research
in various theoretical, methodological, and academic contexts.
Leandra H. Hernandez, Diana I. Bowen, Sara De Los Santos Upton, and
Amanda R. Martinez have assembled a collection of case studies that
focus on health, media, rhetoric, identity, organizations, the
environment, and academia. Contributors expand upon previous
Latina/o/x Communication Studies scholarship by examining identity
and academic experiences in our current political climate; the role
of language, identity, and Latinidades in health and media
contexts; and the role of social activism in rhetorical,
environmental, organizational, and border studies contexts.
Scholars of communication, Latin American Studies, rhetoric, and
sociology will find this book particularly useful.
This book articulates Joteria Communication Studies as a
subdiscipline and as a praxis for resisting multiple forms of
oppression by focusing on how everyday performances of identity and
culture challenge master narratives of power and control. Although
this book is for scholars, artists, and practitioners from
communication studies, gender and sexuality studies, performance
studies, cultural studies, or even, Latinx and Chicanx studies in
education, sociology, history, literature, media, arts, and
humanities, this book speaks to and with those nonheteronormative
mestizas/os who perform their sexuality and gender in queer
practices and communicative forms-Joteria. As a methodological
intervention into the study of marginalized and subaltern
communities, this book provides research on Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender, Queer, and Questioning (GBTQ) Chicano and Latino
communities from specific geographic regions of the U.S. Southwest.
Utilizing multiple methods, this book provides a cultural map or
political snapshot of a particular time and place from a particular
point of view or location and generates knowledge that highlights
reflexivity, cultural/queer nuances, and decolonial acts of
resistance. Specifically, this book locates "theories in the flesh"
in the borderlands narratives of Joteria, such as cuentos,
platicas, chisme, testimonio, mitos, and consejos. These theories
of power and resistance create knowledge about how Joteria make
sense of their own difference, how people interpret their assumed
or perceived difference, and ultimately, how difference is managed
as an emancipatory tool toward the goal of queer of color world
making.
This book articulates Joteria Communication Studies as a
subdiscipline and as a praxis for resisting multiple forms of
oppression by focusing on how everyday performances of identity and
culture challenge master narratives of power and control. Although
this book is for scholars, artists, and practitioners from
communication studies, gender and sexuality studies, performance
studies, cultural studies, or even, Latinx and Chicanx studies in
education, sociology, history, literature, media, arts, and
humanities, this book speaks to and with those nonheteronormative
mestizas/os who perform their sexuality and gender in queer
practices and communicative forms-Joteria. As a methodological
intervention into the study of marginalized and subaltern
communities, this book provides research on Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender, Queer, and Questioning (GBTQ) Chicano and Latino
communities from specific geographic regions of the U.S. Southwest.
Utilizing multiple methods, this book provides a cultural map or
political snapshot of a particular time and place from a particular
point of view or location and generates knowledge that highlights
reflexivity, cultural/queer nuances, and decolonial acts of
resistance. Specifically, this book locates "theories in the flesh"
in the borderlands narratives of Joteria, such as cuentos,
platicas, chisme, testimonio, mitos, and consejos. These theories
of power and resistance create knowledge about how Joteria make
sense of their own difference, how people interpret their assumed
or perceived difference, and ultimately, how difference is managed
as an emancipatory tool toward the goal of queer of color world
making.
Critical Intercultural Communication Pedagogy constructs a
theoretical frame through which critical intercultural
communication pedagogy can be dreamed, envisioned, and realized as
praxis. Its chapters provide answers to questions surrounding the
relationship of intercultural communication pedagogy to critical
race theory, queer theory, critical ethnography, and narrative
methodology, among others. Utilizing a diverse array of theoretical
and methodological approaches within critical intercultural
communication research, this collection is creatively engaging,
theoretically innovating, and pedagogically encouraging.
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