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Situating selves : the communication of social identities in American scenes / Donal Carbaugh.

Van Pelt Library HM131 .C2525 1996
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Carbaugh, Donal A.
Series:
SUNY series in human communication processes
SUNY series, human communication processes
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Group identity--United States.
Group identity.
Communication and culture.
United States.
Communication and culture--United States.
Ethnicity--United States.
Ethnicity.
Physical Description:
xix, 238 pages : map ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
Albany, N.Y. : State University of New York Press, [1996]
Summary:
Theories of identity have been built largely on biological, psychological, sociological, and anthropological grounds. Missing from each of these, yet of potential relevance to them all, is a community theory of identity such as the one developed here. Situating Selves presents studies of five American scenes, focusing on the ways social identities are communicatively crafted. Based on fifteen years of fieldwork, the book presents fine-grained analyses of the playful self during sporting events (with special attention given to crowd activities at college basketball games), the working self in a television company, the marital self in weddings and marriages, the gendered self in television "talk shows", and conflicted selves during a community's hotly contested land-use controversy. Carbaugh shows how listening to communication in cultural scenes like these can help reveal how deeply identity is situated in various communicative practices. These include a ritual of play, symbolic allusions to different classes of people, a diversity in the forms of names used upon marriage, the play between genders and gender-neutral language, and the relationship among language, nature, community, and politics. Concluding commentary links the studies to the contemporary American scene, and shows how the focus on communication can integrate into community living both shared and separate identities. Emerging from these studies is a view of communication as not only a situated expression of selves in American scenes, but also an active contributor in constituting those very identities and scenes.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-231) and index.
ISBN:
0791428273
0791428281
OCLC:
32429523

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