Our Voices: Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication

Author:   Gonzalez ,  Chen
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Edition:   6th edition
ISBN:  

9780190255237


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   15 October 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Our Voices: Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication


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Overview

Our Voices: Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication examines intercultural communication through an array of cultural and personal perspectives, with each of its contributors writing a first-person account of his or her experiences in the real world. While most readers are collections of scholarly essays that describe intercultural communication, Our Voices presents short, student-oriented readings chosen with an eye toward engaging the reader. Collectively, the readings tackle the key areas of communication-rhetoric, mass communication, and interpersonal communication-using a uniquely expansive and humanist perspective that provides a voice to otherwise marginalized members of society. Praised by students for its abundance of short, first-person narratives, Our Voices traverses topics as diverse as queer identity, racial discourse, and codes of communication in nontraditional families.

Full Product Details

Author:   Gonzalez ,  Chen
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Edition:   6th edition
Dimensions:   Width: 19.10cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.640kg
ISBN:  

9780190255237


ISBN 10:   0190255234
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   15 October 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"Preface Acknowledgements *Introduction Alberto González and Yea-Wen Chen *Preview to Part I Part I: Naming Ourselves *1. ""What's in a Name?"" Shifting Meanings, Negotiating Identities, and Globalizing Relationships Yea-Wen Chen Chen identifies the cultural and global forces that influence naming in professional and family settings. *2. Growing Up Together: The Internet, Cultural Knowledge, and Thai Names Jenny Ungbha Korn Korn traces her growing understanding of and connection to her Thai heritage to the rise of the Internet and social media. 3. Dis/orienting Identities: Asian Americans, History, and Intercultural Communication Thomas Nakayama Nakayama argues for the centrality of the Japanese American experience in the making of American culture and history. 4. Osage Naming Ritual as a Form of Cultural Identity Steven B. Pratt, Merry C. Pratt, and Rozilyn Miller The authors describe how the centuries-old Osage naming ritual connects contemporary Osages to tribal identity. 5. Names, Narratives, and the Evolution of Ethnic Identity Dolores V. Tanno Tanno describes how each ethnic self-reference communicates a story and how multiple stories provide significance to an American identity. *Preview to Part II Part II: Representing Cultural Knowledge in Interpersonal and Mediated Contexts *6. I Am Hearing Impaired: Negotiating Identity in a Hearing World John Parrish-Sprowl Parrish-Sprowl explains how a new cultural and professional identity is negotiated when he becomes hearing impaired. 7. Sister-Friends: Reflections on Black Women's Communication in Intra- and Intercultural Friendships Nekita Huling, Creshema Murray, and Marsha Houston The authors explore the importance of co-creating safe spaces for speaking, using in-group language style, and social support in the construction of Black women's intracultural and intercultural friendships. 8. The Rhetoric of La Familia among Mexican Americans Margarita Gangotena Gangotena uses the concept of la familia to explore Mexican American family communication. 9. When Mississippi Chinese Talk Gwendolyn Gong Gong describes speech strategies used by Chinese from the Mississippi Delta. 10. The Reason Why We Sing: Understanding Traditional African American Worship Janice D. Hamlet Hamlet explores how the rhetorical style of preachers in traditional black churches preserves the cultural identity of black communities. 11. Latina/o Experiences with Mediated Communication Diana I. Ríos Ríos discusses the dual functions of mass media, online media and social media in Mexican American communities in Texas. 12. ""I Am Not Jamal"": Asian Indians, Simplistic Perceptions, and the Model Minority Myth Pravin Rodrigues In the 2008 film Slumdog Millionaire, U.S. audiences view representations of contemporary India. Rodrigues examines these representations in light of his interpersonal relationships. 13. Native American Culture and Communication Through Humor Charmaine Shutiva Shutiva challenges some of the stereotypes about Native Americans and discusses the role that humor plays in their culture. 14. Statue or Statement? Racial Tensions in a 9/11 Memorial Teresa Nance and Anita Foeman Nance and Foeman examine how public opposition to a sculpture honoring New York City firefighters reveals the uneasy state of race relations in the United States. *Preview to Part III Part III: Negotiating Sexuality and Gender 15. Women and Islam: A Muslim Feminist Perspective Hoda Al-Mutawah An interview with Al-Mutawah, who responds to questions posed by U.S. students. 16. Jewish and/or Woman: Identity and Communicative Style Sheryl Perlmutter Bowen Bowen explores the particular intersection of her Jewish upbringing and the feminism she adopted as an adult. 17. Tyler Perry: The (Self-Appointed) Savior of Black Womanhood Robin R. Means Coleman Tyler Perry's representations of African American women in recent films are critically examined. 18. When Miss America Was Always White Navita Cummings James James reflects on the meaning of blackness and black womanhood through family stories and personal experiences. 19. Black Queer Identity, Imaginative Rationality, and the Language of Home Charles I. Nero The meaning of home and community for African American gay men is explored through poetry, song lyrics, and feminist and gay/lesbian theory. 20. Navigating the Third Space with Double Consciousness: South Asian Indian Women in the American Workplace Suchitra Shenoy-Packer Shenoy-Packer describes her attempts to become accepted in the U.S. workplace while balancing new and often conflicting categories of identity. 21. Constructing U.S. American Jewish Male Identity David E. Weber Weber describes the tensions and challenges that occur when Jewish identity is marked as unusual. *Preview to Part IV Part IV: Celebrating Cultures 22. Hispanic Heritage Month: Not for Members Only Alberto González and Jennifer Willis-Rivera González and Willis-Rivera examine the rhetorical opportunities and challenges that accompany annual ethnic celebrations. 23. Communicating Good Luck During the Chinese New Year Mary Fong Fong discusses good luck expressed through speech and gift-giving practices that display goodwill and affection. 24. Hybrid Revivals: Ethnicity and South Asian Celebration Radha S. Hegde Hegde describes how Hindu festivals inspire their participants despite outside efforts to limit ""foreign"" cultural gatherings. *Preview to Part V Part V: Valuing and Contesting Languages 25. Identity and Struggle in Jamaican Talk Dexter B. Gordon Gordon describes the creative ""survival mechanisms"" in Jamaican talk that privilege the local and counter the colonial. 26. The Power of Wastah in Lebanese Speech Mahboub Hashem Hashem examines wastah as an effective Lebanese method of mediating conflicts and relationships. 27. Broadening the View of Black Language Use: Toward a Better Understanding of Words and Worlds Karla D. Scott Scott examines misconceptions about black language use and explains how local ways of speaking are markers of identity and solidarity. 28. Confessions of a Thirty-Something Hip-Hop (Old) Head Eric King Watts Watts interprets the tensions that arise when popular culture takes the ""N-word"" from private in-house dialogues and distributes it in the easy-to-open package of hip-hop. *Preview to Part VI Part VI: Living in Bicultural Relationships 29. Sapphire and Sappho: Allies in Authenticity Brenda J. Allen Allen describes her interracial friendship with a lesbian colleague and how the two overcame sanctions against such a relationship. 30. Creating a Family Across Race and Gender Borders Marlene Fine and Fern Johnson As white mothers of two adopted African American boys, Fine and Johnson examine the communication codes operating in the creation of their multiracial and ""nontraditional"" family. 31. ""I Know It Was the Blood"": Defining the Biracial Self in a Euro-American Society Tina M. Harris In exploring the biracial identities of her students, Harris comes to appreciate her own biracial heritage. 32. Struggling for Identity: Multiethnic and Biracial Individuals in America Mona Freeman Leonard Leonard reveals how social intolerance of racial ambiguity poses dilemmas and interpersonal challenges for multiethnic individuals. *Preview to Part VII Part VII: Intersecting Identities of Class and Culture 33. Invisible Identities: Notes on Class and Race David Engen Engen invites readers to consider the ways in which America's working class can and should be considered a cultural community. 34. Home as Respite for the Working-Class Academic Katherine G. Hendrix Hendrix traces her journey from her ""working poor"" upbringing to ""affluent class"" lifestyle. 35. More Than White: Locating an Invisible Class Identity Brandi Lawless Lawless explores the construction of ""lower class"" white identity in her personal and academic experiences. 36. Working Through Identity: Understanding Class in the Context of Race, Ethnicity, and Gender Kathleen Wong(Lau) Wong(Lau) interprets the intertwining aspects of race, gender, and class as she recounts her coming of age in both Chinese immigrant and American university settings. *Preview to Part VIII Part VIII: Traversing Cultural Paths *37. Deconstructing the Refugee Body: Toward an Intercultural Understanding of Refugee and Host Communities Eddah Mbula Mutua Based on her extensive work with refugee communities in Africa and in the U.S., Mbula Mutua explores the question: How do we begin to understand the interactions between refugee and host communities? *38. Parenting in a Foreign Land: Experiences of Recent Chinese Immigrant Women Qi Tang Tang reveals the complex balance of considerations faced by a small group of Chinese mothers in the U.S. South as they raise Chinese American children. 39. Temporally Legal: My Traveling Across Borders of Im/migration Hsin-I Cheng Cheng describes the process of ""documenting"" transnational workers. 40. Women Writing Borders, Borders Writing Women: Immigration, Assimilation and the Politics of Speaking Aimee Carrillo Rowe Carrillo Rowe deconstructs immigration politics as she examines her family's migratory history. 41. The Cultural Experience of Space and Body: A Reading of Latin American and Anglo-American Comportment in Public Elizabeth Lozano Lozano discusses assumptions about ""public space"" in Anglo-American and Latin American cultures. 42. Regionalism and Communication: Voices from the Chinese Diaspora Casey Man Kong Lum Lum discusses regional differences among Chinese communities in New York City and how ethnic identity is maintained. 43. Notes from the ""War Generation"": Lebanon and the 33 Days War Souhad Kahil Growing up during the occupation of South Lebanon, Kahil experiences the ""Thirty-Three Day War"" between Hezbollah and Israel. *Appendix A: Suggested Questions for Discussion *Appendix B: Supplementary Reading *Appendix C: About the Contributors * New or revised for this edition."

Reviews

Our Voices is a powerful collection of personal essays that define, alter, and engage critically our ideas about culture and identity. -- Sandra L Faulkner, Bowling Green State University This book is an integral part of understanding intercultural communication. The authors provide their perspectives in a way that illustrate a range of experiences that are often not showcased in mainstream discussions. This text highlights much-needed perspectives for an ethical discussion of intercultural communication. -- Tara Schuwerk, Stetson University I especially appreciate the fact the fact that the articles are written by scholars with various cultural backgrounds. It provides credible accounts of individuals' cultural experiences...the major strength of the book as compared to others in the market is the unique angle and perspective provided by its first-hand, story-telling style. --Mei Zhong, San Diego State University Presents often marginalized perspectives on important identity-related issues, and does so in personalized ways that draw in the reader. --Sara DeTurk, University of Texas at San Antonio One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task. --C. Thomas Preston, Gainesville State College I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice--rather than other approaches that have historically Othered and silenced us--are important in understanding the goals of this book. --Bernadette Calafell, University of Denver The realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues. --Patreece Boone, St. Louis University Our Voices is a powerful collection of personal essays that define, alter, and engage critically our ideas about culture and identity. -- Sandra L Faulkner, Bowling Green State University This book is an integral part of understanding intercultural communication. The authors provide their perspectives in a way that illustrate a range of experiences that are often not showcased in mainstream discussions. This text highlights much-needed perspectives for an ethical discussion of intercultural communication. -- Tara Schuwerk, Stetson University I especially appreciate the fact the fact that the articles are written by scholars with various cultural backgrounds. It provides credible accounts of individuals' cultural experiences...the major strength of the book as compared to others in the market is the unique angle and perspective provided by its first-hand, story-telling style. --Mei Zhong, San Diego State University Presents often marginalized perspectives on important identity-related issues, and does so in personalized ways that draw in the reader. --Sara DeTurk, University of Texas at San Antonio One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task. --C. Thomas Preston, Gainesville State College I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice--rather than other approaches that have historically Othered and silenced us--are important in understanding the goals of this book. --Bernadette Calafell, University of Denver The realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues. --Patreece Boone, St. Louis University


Our Voices is a powerful collection of personal essays that define, alter, and engage critically our ideas about culture and identity. -- Sandra L Faulkner, Bowling Green State University This book is an integral part of understanding intercultural communication. The authors provide their perspectives in a way that illustrate a range of experiences that are often not showcased in mainstream discussions. This text highlights much-needed perspectives for an ethical discussion of intercultural communication. -- Tara Schuwerk, Stetson University I especially appreciate the fact the fact that the articles are written by scholars with various cultural backgrounds. It provides credible accounts of individuals' cultural experiences...the major strength of the book as compared to others in the market is the unique angle and perspective provided by its first-hand, story-telling style. --Mei Zhong, San Diego State University Presents often marginalized perspectives on important identity-related issues, and does so in personalized ways that draw in the reader. --Sara DeTurk, University of Texas at San Antonio One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task. --C. Thomas Preston, Gainesville State College I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice--rather than other approaches that have historically Othered and silenced us--are important in understanding the goals of this book. --Bernadette Calafell, University of Denver The realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues. --Patreece Boone, St. Louis University


<em>Our Voices is a powerful collection of personal essays that define, alter, and engage critically our ideas about culture and identity. -- Sandra L Faulkner, Bowling Green State University </em> This book is an integral part of understanding intercultural communication. The authors provide their perspectives in a way that illustrate a range of experiences that are often not showcased in mainstream discussions. This text highlights much-needed perspectives for an ethical discussion of intercultural communication. -- Tara Schuwerk, <em>Stetson University</em> I especially appreciate the fact the fact that the articles are written by scholars with various cultural backgrounds. It provides credible accounts of individuals' cultural experiences...the major strength of the book as compared to others in the market is the unique angle and perspective provided by its first-hand, story-telling style. --Mei Zhong, <em>San Diego State University</em> Presents often marginalized perspectives on important identity-related issues, and does so in personalized ways that draw in the reader. --Sara DeTurk, <em>University of Texas at San Antonio</em> One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task. --C. Thomas Preston, <em>Gainesville State College</em> I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice--rather than other approaches that have historically Othered and silenced us--are important in understanding the goals of this book. --Bernadette Calafell, <em>University of Denver</em> The realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues. --Patreece Boone, <em>St. Louis University</em>


Our Voices is a powerful collection of personal essays that define, alter, and engage critically our ideas about culture and identity. -- Sandra L Faulkner, Bowling Green State University This book is an integral part of understanding intercultural communication. The authors provide their perspectives in a way that illustrate a range of experiences that are often not showcased in mainstream discussions. This text highlights much-needed perspectives for an ethical discussion of intercultural communication. -- Tara Schuwerk, Stetson University I especially appreciate the fact the fact that the articles are written by scholars with various cultural backgrounds. It provides credible accounts of individuals' cultural experiences...the major strength of the book as compared to others in the market is the unique angle and perspective provided by its first-hand, story-telling style. --Mei Zhong, San Diego State University Presents often marginalized perspectives on important identity-related issues, and does so in personalized ways that draw in the reader. --Sara DeTurk, University of Texas at San Antonio One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task. --C. Thomas Preston, Gainesville State College I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice--rather than other approaches that have historically Othered and silenced us--are important in understanding the goals of this book. --Bernadette Calafell, University of Denver The realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues. --Patreece Boone, St. Louis University Our Voices is a powerful collection of personal essays that define, alter, and engage critically our ideas about culture and identity. -- Sandra L Faulkner, Bowling Green State University This book is an integral part of understanding intercultural communication. The authors provide their perspectives in a way that illustrate a range of experiences that are often not showcased in mainstream discussions. This text highlights much-needed perspectives for an ethical discussion of intercultural communication. -- Tara Schuwerk, Stetson University I especially appreciate the fact the fact that the articles are written by scholars with various cultural backgrounds. It provides credible accounts of individuals' cultural experiences...the major strength of the book as compared to others in the market is the unique angle and perspective provided by its first-hand, story-telling style. --Mei Zhong, San Diego State University Presents often marginalized perspectives on important identity-related issues, and does so in personalized ways that draw in the reader. --Sara DeTurk, University of Texas at San Antonio One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task. --C. Thomas Preston, Gainesville State College I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice--rather than other approaches that have historically Othered and silenced us--are important in understanding the goals of this book. --Bernadette Calafell, University of Denver The realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues. --Patreece Boone, St. Louis University


Author Information

Alberto González (PhD, The Ohio State University) is professor and chair in the Department of Communication at Bowling Green State University. His research has appeared in various journals including Quarterly Journal of Speech, Southern Communication Journal, Communication Quarterly, Western Journal of Speech Communication, Intercultural Communication Studies, Women & Language, and Journal of Poverty. Yea-Wen Chen (PhD, University of New Mexico) is assistant professor in the School of Communication Studies at Ohio University. Her research addresses issues of cultural identities, ideologies, and social justice within intercultural relationships across local and global contexts. Her work appears in such journals as Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, Howard Journal of Communications, and Journal of Intercultural Communication Research, and she also contributes invited book chapters and to online publications.

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