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Intercultural Research
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Critical Intercultural Communication Studies
ISSN: 1528-6118
Within Communication, culture is broadly understood as a meaning-making process that evidences itself within discourse, mediated forms, and interactional instances to constitute group autonomy. Within that meaning-making process, intercultural communication considers relationships between institutions and their societies, media and their audiences, and peoples and their communities. The formalized study of intercultural communication has always been problematic; like most disciplines and subdisciplines, its usefulness and limitations emerge from the historical context in which it is studied. Developed after World War II, intercultural communication initially served as an applied area of study to train U.S. governmental and business entities for relationships beyond U.S. borders. Then, out of the struggles of the U.S. Civil Rights era, intercultural communication expanded to concern itself with relationships between differing racial and ethnic groups. By the turn of the twentieth century, some intercultural communication scholars had fully embraced studying the differential power relations between nations, communities, and individuals thus catalyzing a body of research known as critical intercultural communication. Now, heading into the middle of the twenty-first century, critical intercultural communication has come into focus as an area of study that emphasizes, explains, and seeks to resolve power relations within specific contexts, applying theories and modes of inquiry suited to contemporary issues understood within their ongoing historical dynamics. As our institutions and their societies, mediated forms and their corresponding audiences, and communities and their members continue to alter and morph, critical intercultural communication adapts to interpret and envision progressive, socially just ways forward. This series, therefore, invites scholarship that challenges status quo cultural constitutions by recognizing and problematizing hegemonic modes of belonging and being. Spanning a range of contexts, critical intercultural communication considers symbolic and performative orders across local, national, hemispheric and transnational circuits. Moreover, this series fosters interdisciplinary conversations that innovate ontological and epistemological forms, advancing a range of systematic intellectual approaches to cultural transformation and validation. The series is particularly interested in works grounded in BIPOC, decolonial, feminist, queer, crip, and/or kink perspectives that construct claims, knowledges, and theories capable of guiding society toward new social justice knowings.
45 publications
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Traces of the Foreign
The Reception of Translations of Spanish American Prose in Poland in 1945-2005 from the Perspective of Intercultural Communication©2019 Monographs -
Semantics and Word Formation
The Semantic Development of Five French Suffixes in Middle English©2011 Monographs -
The Semantic Theory of Knowledge
©2020 Monographs -
The Semantics of Chaos in Tjutčev
Teilausgabe von Pratt, Sarah: Alternatives in Russian Romanticism©1983 Monographs -
The Semantics of Chinese Aspects
Theoretical Descriptions and a Computational Implementation©2007 Thesis -
Rethinking Intercultural Competence
Theoretical Challenges and Practical Issues©2021 Edited Collection -
Conceptual Atomism and Justificationist Semantics
©2008 Monographs -
Intercultural Health Communication
©2020 Textbook -
Semantics of Spanish Verbal Categories
©1999 Monographs