2nd Edition

Communication as Culture, Revised Edition Essays on Media and Society

By James W. Carey Copyright 2009
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    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.

    Series Editor's Introduction

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    PART I: COMMUNICATION AS CULTURE

    A Cultural Approach to Communication

    Mass Communication and Cultural Studies

    Reconceiving "Mass" and "Media"

    Overcoming Resistance to Cultural Studies

    PART II: TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE

    The Mythos of the Electronic Revolution with John J Quirk

    Space, Time and Communications: A Tribute to Harold Innis

    The History of the Future with John J Quirk

    Technology and Ideology: The Case of the Telegraph

    Works Cited

    Index

    About the Author

     

     

    Biography

    James W. Carey was born in 1934 in Providence, Rhode Island. He earned a first degree in Business at the University of Rhode Island before attending the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he was awarded a doctorate in communications. He was appointed to the faculty at Illinois in 1963 and was director of its Institute for Communication Research from 1969-76. From 1976-79, Carey held the George H. Gallup Chair at the University of Iowa, but he returned to Illinois in 1979 to become Dean of the College of Communication, a position he held until 1992. He joined the faculty of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism in 1992 and remained there until his death in May, 2006. In the course of a distinguished career as an administrator, teacher, original thinker and pioneer in the fields of communication and American cultural studies, Carey published approximately 170 essays, speeches, and reviews.

    This work by a provocative and thoughtful scholar is a tour de fource from which hundreds of seminars should bloom. Revisiting Jim Carey is well worth the time.

    -- Ferrel Guillory, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly