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OverviewDespite a growing emphasis on relationship studies in interpersonal communication, serious attention to the conceptual meaning of relationship has been limited. The purpose of this volume is to explore the meaning and use of relationship in interpersonal communication studies. The contributors to this volume, representatives of related, but differing perspectives, outline definitional boundaries and conceptual implications of the term stemming from their particular ontological and epistemological approaches. This volume provides an engaging and provocative examination of relationship by seasoned writers who are committed to seeing the field with new eyes. As such, the book will be invaluable to scholars and researchers in the field. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Richard L. Conville , L. Edna RogersPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Praeger Publishers Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.20cm Weight: 0.508kg ISBN: 9780275952112ISBN 10: 0275952118 Pages: 216 Publication Date: 08 April 1998 Recommended Age: From 7 to 17 years Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents"Introduction Ants to Elephants: A Comparative Perspective on the Meaning of Relationship by Jo Liska Historical Frames of Relational Perspectives by John Stewart Relationships and Communication: A Social Communication and Strongly Consequential View by Stuart J. Sigman The Meaning of Relationship in Relational Communication by L. Edna Rogers Giddens' Conception of Personal Relationships and Its Relevance to Communication Theory by Robert D. McPhee ""But I Thought That We Were More Than Error Variance"": Application of the Social Relations Model to Personal Relationships by Sandra Metts Narrative, Dialectic and Relationships by Richard L. Conville Making Meanings with Friends by William K. Rawlins References Index"Reviews?Many of the ideas presented in the book challenge traditional notions and provide the reader with much to think about....[B]y reading this book, students and scholars of interpersonal communication will find that the notion of relationship should not be taken for granted.?-Journal of Marriage and the Family Many of the ideas presented in the book challenge traditional notions and provide the reader with much to think about....[B]y reading this book, students and scholars of interpersonal communication will find that the notion of relationship should not be taken for granted. -Journal of Marriage and the Family This book is absolutely necessary reading for students/scholars of interpersonal communication and/or personal relationships. This endeavor is as important in the field of communication as defining terms like communication and interpersonal communication. -Kathryn Dindia University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee This book is must reading for scholars and students of interpersonal communication. It provides rich, thoughtful analyses of the widely used but ill-defined term relationship. Essays in the book reveal how various views of relationship reflect assumptions about human beings and our ways of knowing and connecting with others. -Julia T. Wood Hairston Professor of Communication Studies Conville, Rogers and company chart the essences of relationships in this text, and the result is an atlas of helpful and inviting conceptual maps of interpersonal territory....The book will be long valued, not only because it provides some answers, but because it poses such interesting questions that will undoubtedly help to set the scholarly agenda for years to come. The relationship and communication literatures are in need of this book and of the discussion and debate it will generate. -Barbara M. Montgomery Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences Millersville University Conville, Rogers and company chart the essences of relationships in this text, and the result is an atlas of helpful and inviting conceptual maps of interpersonal territory....The book will be long valued, not only because it provides some answers, but because it poses such interesting questions that will undoubtedly help to set the scholarly agenda for years to come. The relationship and communication literatures are in need of this book and of the discussion and debate it will generate. -Barbara M. Montgomery Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences Millersville University Conville, Rogers and company chart the essences of relationships in this text, and the result is an atlas of helpful and inviting conceptual maps of interpersonal territory....The book will be long valued, not only because it provides some answers, but because it poses such interesting questions that will undoubtedly help to set the scholarly agenda for years to come. The relationship and communication literatures are in need of this book and of the discussion and debate it will generate. -Barbara M. Montgomery Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences Millersville University This book is absolutely necessary reading for students/scholars of interpersonal communication and/or personal relationships. This endeavor is as important in the field of communication as defining terms like communication and interpersonal communication. -Kathryn Dindia University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee This book is must reading for scholars and students of interpersonal communication. It provides rich, thoughtful analyses of the widely used but ill-defined term relationship. Essays in the book reveal how various views of relationship reflect assumptions about human beings and our ways of knowing and connecting with others. -Julia T. Wood Hairston Professor of Communication Studies Many of the ideas presented in the book challenge traditional notions and provide the reader with much to think about....[B]y reading this book, students and scholars of interpersonal communication will find that the notion of relationship should not be taken for granted. -Journal of Marriage and the Family ?Many of the ideas presented in the book challenge traditional notions and provide the reader with much to think about....[B]y reading this book, students and scholars of interpersonal communication will find that the notion of relationship should not be taken for granted.?-Journal of Marriage and the Family Author InformationRICHARD L. CONVILLE is Professor in the Department of Speech Communication at the University of Southern Mississippi. L. EDNA ROGERS is Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |