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CHAPTER 1 A Cultural Approach to Communication
James Carey (from Communication as Culture)
When I decided some years ago to read seriously the literature of communications, a wise man
suggested I begin with John Dewey. It was advice I have never regretted accepting. Although
there are limitations to Dewey–his literary style was described by William James as damnable–
there is a depth to his work, a natural excess common to seminal minds, that offers permanent
complexities, and paradoxes over which to puzzle–surely something absent from most of our
literature.
Dewey opens an important chapter in Experience and Nature with the seemingly preposterous
claim that "of all things communication is the most wonderful" (1939: 385). What could he have
meant by that? If we interpret the sentence literally, it must be either false or mundane. Surely
most of the news and entertainment we receive through the mass media are of the order that
Thoreau predicted for the international telegraph: "the intelligence that Princess Adelaide had
the whooping cough." A daily visit with the New York Times is not quite so trivial, though it is
an experience more depressing than wonderful. Moreover, most of one's encounters with
others are wonderful only in moments of excessive masochism. Dewey's sentence, by any
reasonable interpretation, is either false to everyday experience or simply mundane if he
means only that on some occasions communication is satisfying and rewarding.
In another place Dewey offers an equally enigmatic comment on communication: "Society
exists not only by transmission, by communication, but it may fairly be said to exist in
transmission, in communication" (Dewey, 1916: 5). What is the significance of the shift in
prepositions? Is Dewey claiming that societies distribute information, to speak rather too
anthropomorphically, and that by such transactions and the channels of communication
peculiar to them society is made possible? That is certainly a reasonable claim, but we hardly
need social scientists and philosophers to tell us so. It reminds me of Robert Nisbet's acid
remark that if you need sociologists to inform you whether or not you have a ruling class, you
surely don't. But if this transparent interpretation is rejected, are there any guarantees that after
peeling away layers of semantic complexity anything more substantial will be revealed?
I think there are, for the body of Dewey's work reveals a substantial rather than a pedestrian
intelligence. Rather than quoting him ritualistically (for the lines I have cited regularly appear
without comment or interpretation in the literature of communications), we would be better
advised to untangle this underlying complexity for the light it might cast upon contemporary
studies. I think this complexity derives from Dewey's use of communication in two quite
different senses. He understood better than most of us that communication has had two
contrasting definitions in the history of Western thought, and he used the conflict between
these definitions as a source of creative tension in his work. This same conflict led him, not
surprisingly, into some of his characteristic errors. Rather than blissfully repeating his insights
or unconsciously duplicating his errors, we might extend his thought by seizing upon the same
contradiction he perceived in our use of the term "communication" and use it in turn as a
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device for vivifying our studies.
Two alternative conceptions of communication have been alive in American culture since this
term entered common discourse in the nineteenth century. Both definitions derive, as with
much in secular culture, from religious oirigins, though they refer to somewhat different
regions of religious experience. We might label these descriptions, if only to provide handy
pegs upon which to hang our thought, a transmission view of communication and a ritual view
of communication.
The transmission view of communication is the commonest in our culture–perhaps in all
industrial cultures–and dominates contemporary dictionary entries under the term. It is
defined by terms such as "impaffing," "sending," "transmitting," or "giving information to
others." It is formed from a metaphor of geography or transportation. In the nineteenth century
but to a lesser extent today, the movement of goods or people and the movement of
information were seen as essentially identical processes and both were described by the
common noun "communication." The center of this idea of communication is the transmission
of signals or messages over distance for the purpose of control. It is a view of communication
that derives from one of the most ancient of human dreams: the desire to increase the speed
and effect of messages as they travel in space. From the time upper and lower Egypt were
unified under the First Dynasty down through the invention of the telegraph, transportation
and communication were inseparably linked. Although messages might be centrally produced
and controlled, through monopolization of writing or the rapid production of print, these
messages, carried in the hands of a messenger or between the bindings of a book, still had to be
distributed, if they were to have their desired effect, by rapid transportation. The telegraph
ended the identity but did not destroy the metaphor. Our basic orientation to communication
remains grounded, at the deepest roots of our thinking, in the idea of transmission:
communication is a process whereby messages are transmitted and distributed in space for the
control of distance and people.
I said this view originated in religion, though the foregoing sentences seem more indebted to
politics, economics, and technology. Nonetheless, the roots of the transmission view of
communication, in our culture at least, lie in essentially religious attitudes. I can illustrate this
by a devious though, in detail, inadequate path.
In its modern dress the transmission view of communication arises, as the Oxford English
Dictionary will attest, at the onset of the age of exploration and discovery. We have been
reminded rather too often that the motives behind this vast movement in space were political
and mercantilistic. Certainly those motives were present, but their importance should not
obscure the equally compelling fact that a major motive behind this movement in space,
particularly as evidenced by the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa or the Puritans in
New England, was religious. The desire to escape the boundaries of Europe, to create a new
life, to found new communities, to carve a New Jerusalem out of the woods of Massachusetts,
were primary motives behind the unprecedented movement of white European civilization
over virtually the entire globe. The vast and, for the first time, democratic migration in space
was above all an attempt to trade an old world for a new and represented the profound belief
that movement in space could be in itself a redemptive act. It is a belief Americans have never
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quite escaped.
Transportation, particularly when it brought the Christian community of Europe into contact
with the heathen community of the Americas, was seen as a form of communication with
profoundly religious implications. This movement in space was an attempt to establish and
extend the kingdom of God, to create the conditions under which godly understanding might
be realized, to produce a heavenly though still terrestrial city.
The moral meaning of transportation, then, was the establishment and extension of God's
kingdom on earth. The moral meaning of communication was the same. By the middle of the
nineteenth century the telegraph broke the identity of communication and transportation but
also led a preacher of the era, Gardner Spring, to exclaim that we were on the "border of a
spiritual harvest because thought now travels by steam and magnetic wires" (Miller, 1965: 48).
Similarly, in 1848 "James L. Batchelder could declare that the Almighty himself had constructed
the railroad for missionary purposes and, as Samuel Morse prophesied with the first
telegraphic message, the purpose of the invention was not to spread the price of pork but to
ask the question 'What Hath God Wrought?"' (Miller, 1965: 52). This new technology entered
American discussions not as a mundane fact but.as divinely inspired for the purposes of
spreading the Christian message farther and faster, eclipsing time and transcending space,
saving the heathen, bringing closer and making more probable the day of salvation. As the
century wore on and religious thought was increasingly tied to applied science, the new
technology of communication came to be seen as the ideal device for the conquest of space and
populations. Our most distinguished student of these matters, Perry Miller, has commented:
The unanimity (among Protestant sects), which might at first Eight seem wholly
supernatural, was wrought by the telegraph and the press. These conveyed and
published "the thrill of Christian sympathy, with the tidings of abounding grace,
from multitudes in every city simultaneously assembled, in effect almost bringing a
nation together in one praying intercourse." Nor could it be only fortuitous that the
movement should coincide with the Atlantic Cable, for both were harbingers "of that
which is the forerunner of ultimate spiritual victory ...." The awakening of 1858 first
made vital for the American imagination a realizable program of a Christianized
technology. (Miller, 1965: 91)
Soon, as the forces of science and secularization gained ground, the obvious religious
metaphors fell away and the technology of communication itself moved to the center of
thought. Moreover, the superiority of communication over transportation was assured by the
observation of one nineteenth century commentator that the telegraph was important because it
involved not the mere "modification of matter but the transmission of thought."
Communication was viewed as a process and a technology that would, sometimes for religious
purposes, spread, transmit, and disseminate knowledge, ideas, and information farther and
faster with the goal of controlling space and people. There were dissenters, of course, and I
have already quoted Thoreau's disenchanted remark on the telegraph. More pessimistically,
John C. Calhoun saw the "subjugation of electricity to the mechanical necessities of man . . (as)
the last era in human civilization" (quoted in Miller, 1965: 307). But the dissenters were few,
and the transmission view of communication, albeit in increasingly secularized and scientific
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form, has dominated our thought and culture since that time. Moreover, as can be seen in
contemporary popular commentary and even in technical discussions of new communications
technology, the historic religious undercurrent has never been eliminated from our thought.
From the telegraph to the computer the same sense of profound possibility for moral
improvement is present whenever these machines are invoked. And we need not be reminded
of the regularity with which improved communication is invoked by an army of teachers,
preachers, and columnists as the talisman of all our troubles. More controversially, the same
root attitudes, as I can only assert here rather than demonstrate, are at work in most of our
scientifically sophisticated views of communication.
The ritual view of communication, though a minor thread in our national thought, is by far the
older of those views–old enough in fact for dictionaries to list it under "Archaic.!' In a ritual
definition, communication is linked to terms such as "sharing," "participation," "association,"
"fellowship," and "the possession of a common faith." This definition exploits the ancient
identity and common roots of the terms "commonness," "communion," "community," and
"communication," A ritual view of communication is directed not toward the extension of
messages in space but toward the maintenance of society in time; not the act of imparting
information but the representation of shared beliefs.
If the archetypal case of communication under a transmission view is the extension of messages
across geography for the purpose of control, the archetypal case under a ritual view is the
sacred ceremony that draws persons together in fellowship and commonality.
The indebtedness of the ritual view of communication to religion is apparent in the name
chosen to label it. Moreover, it derives from a view of religion that downplays the role of the
sermon, the instruction and admonition, in order to highlight the role of the prayer, the chant,
and the ceremony. It sees the original or highest manifestation of communication not in the
transmission of intelligent information but in the construction and maintenance of an ordered,
meaningful cultural world that can serve as a control and container for human action.
This view has also been shorn of its explicitly religious origins, but it has never completely
escaped its metaphoric root. Writers in this tradition often trace their heritage, in part, to
Durkheim's Elementary Forms of Religious Life and to the argument stated elsewhere that
"society substitutes for the world revealed to our senses a different world that is a projection of
the ideals created by the community" (1953: 95). This projection of community ideals and their
embodiment in material form–dance, plays, architecture, news stories, strings of speech–creates
an artificial though nonetheless real symbolic order that operates to provide not information
but confirmation, not to alter attitudes or change minds but to represent an underlying order of
things, not to perform functions but to manifest an ongoing and fragile social process.
The ritual view of communication has not been a dominant motif in American scholarship. Our
thought and work have been glued to a transmission view of communication because this view
is congenial with the underlying wellsprings of American culture, sources that feed into our
scientific life as well as our common, public understandings. There is an irony in this. We have
not explored the ritual view of communication because the concept of culture is such a weak
and evanescent notion in American social thought. We understand that other people have
culture in the anthropological sense and we regularly record it–often mischievously and
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patronizingly. But when we turn critical attention to American culture the concept dissolves
into a residual category useful only when psychological and sociological data are exhausted.
We realize that the underprivileged live in a culture of poverty, use the notion of middleclass
culture as an epithet, and occasionally applaud our high and generally scientific culture, But
the notion of culture is not a hardedged term of intellectual discourse for domestic purposes.
This intellectual aversion to the idea of culture derives in part from our obsessive
individualism, which makes psychological life the paramount reality; from our Puritanism,
which leads to disdain for the significance of human activity that is not practical and work
oriented; and from our isolation of science from culture: science provides culturefree truth
whereas culture provides ethnocentric error.
Consequently, when looking for scholarship that emphasizes the central role of culture and a
ritual view of communication, one must rely heavily on European sources or upon Americans
deeply influenced by European scholarship. As a result the opportunities for
misunderstanding are great. Perhaps, then, some of the difference between a transmission and
a ritual view of communication can be grasped by briefly looking at alternative conceptions of
the role of the newspaper in social life.
If one examines a newspaper under a transmission view of communication, one sees the
medium as an instrument for disseminating news and knowledge, sometimes divertissement,
in larger and larger packages over greater distances. Questions arise as to the effects of this on
audiences: news as enlightening or obscuring reality, as changing or hardening attitudes, as
breeding credibility or doubt. Questions also are raised concerning the functions of news and
the newspaper: Does it maintain the integration of society or its maladaption? Does it function
or misfunction to maintain stability or promote the instability of personalities? Some such
mechanical analysis normally accompanies a "transmission" argument.
A ritual view of communication will focus on a different range of problems in examining a
newspaper. It will, for example, view reading a newspaper less as sending or gaining
information and more as attending a mass, a situation in which nothing new is learned but in
which a particular view of the world is portrayed and confirmed. News reading, and writing, is
a ritual act and moreover a dramatic one. What is arrayed before the reader is not pure
informationbut a portrayal of the contending forces in the world. Moreover, as readers make
their way through the paper, they engage in a continual shift of roles or of dramatic focus. A
story on the monetary crisis salutes them as American patriots fighting those ancient enemies
Germany and Japan; a story on the meeting of the women's political caucus casts them into the
liberation movement as supporter or opponent; a tale of violence on the campus evokes their
class antagonisms and resentments. The model here is not that of information acquisition,
though such acquisition occurs, but of dramatic action in which the reader joins a world of
contending forces as an observer at a play. We do not encounter questions about the effect or
functions of messages as such, but the role of presentation and involvement in the structuring
of the reader's life and time. We recognize, as with religious rituals, that news changes little
and yet is intrinsically satisfying; it performs few functions yet is habitually consumed.
Newspapers do not operate as a source of effects or functions but as dramatically satisfying,
which is not to say pleasing, presentations of what the world at root is. And it is in this role–
that of a text–that a newspaper is seen; like a Balinese cockfight, a Dickens novel, an
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Elizabethan drama, a student rally, it is a presentation of reality that gives life an overall form,
order, and tone.
Moreover, news is a historic reality. It is a form of culture invented by a particular class at a
particular point of history–in this case by the middle class largely in the eighteenth century.
Like any invented cultural form, news both forms and reflects a particular "hunger for
experience," a desire to do away with the epic, heroic, and traditional in favor of the unique,
original, novel, new–news. This "hunger" itself has a history grounded in the changing style
and fortunes of the middle class and as such does not represent a universal taste or necessarily
legitimate form of knowledge (Park, 1955: 7188) but an invention in historical time, that like
most other human inventions, will dissolve when the class that sponsors it and its possibility of
having significance for us evaporates.
Under a ritual view, then, news is not information but drama. It does not describe the world but
portrays an arena of dramatic forces and action; it exists solely in historical time; and it invites
our participation on the basis of our assuming, often vicariously, social roles within it.
Neither of these counterposed views of communication necessarily denies what the other
affirms. A ritual view does not exclude the processes of information transmission or attitude
change. It merely contends that one cannot understand these processes aright except insofar as
they are cast within an essentially ritualistic view of communication and social order. Similarly,
even writers indissolubly wedded to the transmission view of communication must include
some notion, such as Malinowski's phatic communion, to attest however tardily to the place of
ritual action in social life. Nonetheless, in intellectual matters origins determine endings, and
the exact point at which one attempts to unhinge the problem of communication largely
determines the path the analysis can follow.
The power of Dewey's work derives from his working over these counterpoised views of
communication. Communication is "the most wonderful" because it is the basis of human
fellowship; it produces the social bonds, bogus or not, that tie men together and make
associated life possible. Society is possible because of the binding forces of shared information
circulating in an organic system. The fullowing quotation reveals this tension and Dewey's final
emphasis on a ritual view of communication:
There is more than a verbal tie between the words common, community, and
communication. Men live in a community in virtue of the things which they have in
common; and communication is the way in which they come to possess things in
common. What they must have in common . . . are aims, beliefs, aspirations,
knowledge a common understanding– likemindedness as sociologists say. Such
things cannot be passed physically from one to another like bricks; they cannot be
shared as persons would share a pie by dividing it into physical pieces ....
Consensus demands communication (Dewey, 1916: 56).
Dewey was, like the rest of us, often untrue to his own thought. His hopes for the future often
overwhelmed the impact of his analysis. Ah! "the wish is father to the thought." He came to
overvalue scientific information and communication technology as a solvent to social problems
and a source of social bonds. Nonetheless, the tension between these views can still open a
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range of significant problems in communication for they not only represent different
conceptions of communication but correspond to particular historical periods, technologies,
and forms of social order.
The transmission view of communication has dominated American thought since the 1920s.
When I first came into this field I felt that this view of communication, expressed in behavioral
and functional terms, was exhausted. It had become academic: a repetition of past achievement,
a demonstration of the indubitable. Although it led to solid achievement, it could no longer go
forward without disastrous intellectual and social consequences. I felt it was necessary to
reopen the analysis, to reinvigorate it with the tension found in Dewey's work and, above all, to
go elsewhere into biology, theology, anthropology, and literature for some intellectual material
with which we might escape the treadmill we were running.
Part II.
But where does one turn, even provisionally, for the resources with which to get a fresh
perspective on communication? For me at least the resources were found by going back to the
work of Weber, Durkheim, de Tocqueville, and Huizinga, as well as by utilizing
contemporaries such as Kenneth Burke, Hugh Duncan, Adolph Portman, Thomas Kuhn, Peter
Berger, and Clifford Geertz. Basically, however, the most viable though still inadequate
tradition of social thought on communication comes from those colleagues and descendants of
Dewey in the Chicago School: from Mead and Cooley through Robert Park and on to Erving
Goffman.
From such sources one can draw a definition of communication of disarming simplicity yet, I
think, of some intellectual power and scope: communication is a symbolic process whereby
reality is produced, maintained, repaired, and transformed.
Let me attempt to unpack that long first clause emphasizing the symbolic production of reality.
One of the major problems one encounters in talking about communication is that the noun
refers to the most common, mundane human experience. There is truth in Marshall McLuhan's
assertion that the one thing of which the fish is unaware is water, the very medium that forms
its ambience and supports its existence. Similarly, communication, through language and other
symbolic forms, comprises the ambience of human existence. The activities we collectively call
communication–having conversations, giving instructions, imparting knowledge, sharing
significant ideas, seeking information, entertaining and being entertained–are so ordinary and
mundane that it is difficult for them to arrest our attention. Moreover, when we intellectually
visit this process, we often focus on the trivial and unproblematic, so inured are we to the
mysterious and awesome in communication.
A wise man once defined the purpose of art as "making the phenomenon strange." Things can
become so familiar that we no longer perceive them at all. Art, however, can take the sound of
the sea, the intonation of a voice, the texture of a fabric, the design of a face, the play of light
upon a landscape, and wrench these ordinary phenomena out of the backdrop of existence and
force them into the foreground of consideration. When Scott Fitzgerald described Daisy
Buchanan as having "a voice full of money" he moves us, if we are open to the experience, to
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hear again that ordinary thing, the sound of a voice, and to contemplate what it portends. He
arrests our apprehension and focuses it on the mystery of character as revealed in sound.
Similarly, the social sciences can take the most obvious yet background facts of social life and
force them into the foreground of wonderment. They can make us contemplatethe particular
miracles of social life that have become for us just there, plain and unproblematic for the eye to
see. When he comments that communication is the most wonderful among things, surely
Dewey is trying just that: to induce in us a capacity for wonder and awe regarding this
commonplace activity. Dewey knew that knowledge most effectively grew at the point when
things became problematic, when we experience an "information gap" between what
circumstances impelled us toward doing and what we needed to know in order to act at all.
This information gap, this sense of the problematic, often can be reduced only by divesting life
of its mundane trappings and exposing our common sense or scientific assumptions to an
ironic light that makes the phenomenon strange.
To a certain though inadequate degree, my first clause attempts just that. Both our common
sense and scientific realism attest to the fact that there is, first, a real world of objects, events,
and processes that we observe. Second, there is language or symbols that name these events in
the real world and create more or less adequate descriptions of them. There is reality and then,
after the fact, our accounts of it. We insist there is a distinction between reality and fantasy; we
insist that our terms stand in relation to this world as shadow and substance. While language
often distorts, obfuscates, and confuses our perception of this external world, we rarely dispute
this matteroffact realism. We peel away semantic layers of terms and meanings to uncover
this more substantial domain of existence. Language stands to reality as secondary stands to
primary in the old Galilean paradigm from which this view derives.
By the first clause I mean to invert this relationship, not to make any large metaphysical claims
but rather, by reordering the relation of communication to reality, to render communication a
far more problematic activity than it ordinarily seems.
I want to suggest, to play on the Gospel of St. John, that in the beginning was the word; words
are not the names for things but, to steal a line from Kenneth Burke, things are the signs of
words. Reality is not given, not humanly existent, independent of language and toward which
language stands as a pale refraction. Rather, reality is brought into existence, is produced, by
communication–by, in short, the construction, apprehension, and utilization of symbolic forms.
Reality, while not a mere function of symbolic forms, is produced by terministic systems–or by
humans who produce such systems–that focus its existence in specific terms
Under the sway of realism we ordinarily assume there is an order to existence that the human
mind through some faculty may discover and describe. I am suggesting that reality is not there
to discover in any significant detail) The world is entropic–that is, not strictly ordered–though
its variety is constrained enough that the mind can grasp its outline and implant an order over
and within the broad and elastic constraints of nature. To put it colloquially, there are no lines
of latitude and longitude in nature, but by overlaying the globe with this particular, though not
exclusively correct, symbolic organization, order is imposed on spatial organization and
certain, limited human purposes served.
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Whatever reality might be on the mind of Bishop Berkeley's God, whatever it might be for other
animals, it is for us a vast production, a staged creation–something humanly produced and
humanly maintained. Whatever order is in the world is not given in our genes or exclusively
supplied by nature. As the biologist J. Z. Young puts it, "the brains of each one of us does
literally create his or her own world" (1951: 61); the order of history is, as Eric Vogelin puts it,
"the history of order"–the myriad forms in which people have endowed significance, order, and
meaning in the world by the agency of their own intellectual processes.
Emst Cassirer said it, and others have repeated it to the point of deadening its significance: man
lives in a new dimension of reality, symbolic reality, and it is through the agency of this
capacity that existence is produced. However, though it is often said, it is rarely investigated.
More than repeat it, we have to take it seriously, follow it to the end of the line, to assess its
capacity to vivify our studies. What Cassirer is contending is that one must examine
communication, even scientific communication, even mathematical expression, as the primary
phenomena of experience and not as something "softer" and derivative from a "realer" existent
nature.
Lest someone think this obscure, allow me to illustrate with an example, an example at once so
artless and transparent that the meaning will be clear even if engaging complexities are
sacrificed. Let us suppose one had to teach a child of six or seven how to get from home to
school. The child has driven by the school, which is some six or seven blocks away, so he
recognizes it, but he has no idea of the relation between his house and school. The space
between these points might as well be, as the saying goes, a trackless desert. What does one do
in such a situation?
There are a number of options. One might let the child discover the route by trial and error,
correcting him as he goes, in faithful imitation of a conditioning experiment. One might have
the child follow an adult, as I'm told the Apaches do, "imprinting" the route on the child.
However, the ordinary method is simply to draw the child a map. By arranging lines, angles,
names, squares denoting streets and buildings in a pattern on paper, one transforms vacant
space into a featured environment. Although some environments are easier to feature than
others–hence trackless deserts–space is understood and manageable when it is represented in
symbolic form.
The map stands as a representation of an environment capable of clarifying a problematic
situation. It is capable of guiding behavior and simultaneously transforming undifferentiated
space into configured–that is, known, apprehended, understood–space.
Note also that an environment, any given space, can be mapped in a number of different
modes. For example, we might map a particularly important space by producing a poetic or
musical description. As in the song that goes, in part, "first you turn it to the left, then you turn
it to the right," a space can be mapped by a stream of poetic speech that expresses a spatial
essence and that also ensures, by exploiting the mnemonic devices of song and poetry, that the
"map" can be retained in memory. By recalling the poem at appropriate moments, space can be
effectively configured.
A third means of mapping space is danced ritual. The movements of the dance can parallel
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appropriate movements through space. By learning the dance the child acquires a
representation of the space that on another occasion can guide behavior.
Space can be mapped, then, in different modes–utilizing lines on a page, sounds in air,
movements in a dance. All three are symbolic forms, though the symbols differ; visual, oral,
and kinesthetic. Moreover, each of the symbolic forms possesses two distinguishing
characteristics: displacement and productivity. Like ordinary language, each mode allows one
to speak about or represent some thing when the thing in question is not present. This capacity
of displacement, of producing a complicated act when the "real" stimulus is not physically
present, is another often noted though not fully explored capacity. Second, each of these
symbolic forms is productive, for a person in command of the symbols is capable of producing
an infinite number of representations on the basis of a finite number of symbolic elements. As
with language, so with other symbolic forms: a finite set of words or a finite set of phonemes
can produce, through grammatical combination, an infinite set of sentences.
We often argue that a map represents a simplification of or an abstraction from an environment.
Not all the features of an environment are modeled, for the purpose of the representation is to
express not the possible complexity of things but their simplicity. Space is made manageable
by the reduction of information. By doing this, however, different maps bring the same
environment alive in different ways; they produce quite different realities. Therefore, to live
within the purview of different maps is to live within different realities. Consequently, maps
not only constitute the activity known as mapmaking; they constitute nature itself.
A further implication concerns the nature of thought. In our predominantly individualistic
tradition, we are accustomed to think of thought as essentially private, an activity that occurs in
the head–graphically represented by Rodin's "The Thinker." I wish to suggest, in
contradistinction, that thought is predominantly public and social. It occurs primarily on
blackboards, in dances, and in recited poems. The capacity of private thought is a derived and
secondary talent, one that appears biographically later in the person and historically later in the
species. Thought is public because it depends on a publicly available stock of symbols. It is
public in a second and stronger sense. Thinking consists of building maps of environments.
Thought involves constructing a model of an environment and then running the model faster
than the environment to see if nature can be coerced to perform as the model does. In the earlier
example, the map of the neighborhood and the path from home to school represent the
environment; the finger one lays on the map and traces the path is a representation of the child,
the walker. "Running" the map is faster than walking the route and constitutes the "experiment"
or "test."
Thought is the construction and utilization of such maps, models, templates: football plays
diagrammed on a blackboard, equations on paper, ritual dances charting the nature of
ancestors, or streams of prose like this attempting, out in the brightlit world in which we all
live, to present the nature of communication.
This particular miracle we perform daily and hourly–the miracle of producing reality and then
living within and under the fact of our own productions–rests upon a particular quality of
symbols: their ability to be both representations "Of" and "for" reality.
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A blueprint of a house in one mode is a representation "for" reality: under its guidance and
control a reality, a house, is produced that expresses the relations contained in reduced and
simplified form in the blueprint. There is a second use of a blueprint, however. If someone asks
for a description of a particular house, one can simply point to a blueprint and say, "That's the
house." Here the blueprint stands as a representation or symbol of reality: it expresses or
represents in an alternative medium a synoptic formulation of the nature of a particular reality.
While these are merely two sides of the same coin, they point to the dual capacity of symbolic
forms: as "symbols of" they present reality; as "symbols for" they create the very reality they
present.
In my earlier example the map of the neighborhood in one mode is a symbol of, a
representation that can be pointed to when someone asks about the relation between home and
school. Ultimately, the map becomes a representation for reality when, under its guidance, the
child makes his way from home to school and, by the particular blinders as well as the
particular observations the map induces, experiences space in the way it is synoptically
formulated in the map.
It is no different with a religious ritual. In one mode it represents the nature of human life, its
condition and meaning, and in another mode–its "for" mode–it induces the dispositions it
pretends merely to portray.
All human activity is such an exercise (can one resist the word "ritual"?) in squaring the circle.
We first produce the world by symbolic work and then take up residence in the world we have
produced. Alas, there is magic in our selfdeceptions.
We not only produce reality but we must likewise maintain what we have produced, for there
are always new generations coming along for whom our productions are incipiently
problematic and for whom reality must be regenerated and made authoritative. Reality must
be repaired for it consistently breaks down: people get lost physically and spiritually,
experiments fail, evidence counter to the representation is produced, mental derangement sets
in–all threats to our models of and for reality that lead to intense repair work. Finally, we must,
often with fear and regret, toss away our authoritative representations of reality and begin to
build the world anew. We go to bed, to choose an example not quite at random, convinced
behaviorists who view language, under the influence of Skinner, as a matter of operant
conditioning and wake up, for mysterious reasons, convinced rationalists, rebuilding our mode
of language, under the influence of Chomsky, along the lines of deep structures,
transformations, and surface appearances. These are two different intellectual worlds in which
to live, and we may find that the anomalies of one lead us to transform it into another.
To study communication is to examine the actual social process wherein significant symbolic
forms are created, apprehended, and used When described this way some scholars would
dismiss it as insufficiently empirical. My own view is the opposite, for I see it as an attempt to
sweep away our existing notions concerning communication that serve only to devitalize our
data. Our attempts to construct, maintain, repair, and transform reality are publicly observable
activities that occur in historical time. We create, express, and convey our knowledge of and
attitudes toward reality through the construction of a variety of symbol systems: art, science,
journalism, religion, common sense, mythology. How do we do this? What are the differences
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between these forms? What are the historical and comparative variations in them? How do
changes in communication technology influence what we can concretely create and apprehend?
How do groups in society struggle over the definition of what is real? These are some of the
questions, rather too simply put, that communication studies must answer.
Finally, let me emphasize an ironic aspect to the study of communication, a way in which our
subject matter doubles back on itself and presents us with a host of ethical problems. One of
the activities in which we characteristically engage, as in this essay, is communication about
communication itself. However, communication is not some pure phenomenon we can
discover; there is no such thing as communication to be revealed in nature through some
objective method free from the corruption of culture. We understand communication insofar as
we are able to build models or representations of this process. But our models of
communication, like all models, have this dual aspect–an "of" aspect and a "for" aspect. In one
mode communication models tell us what the process is; in their second mode they produce
the behavior they have described. Communication can be modeled in several empirically
adequate ways, but these several models have different ethical implications for they produce
different forms of social relations.
Let us face this dilemma directly. There is nothing in our genes that tells us how to create and
execute those activities we summarize under the term "communication." If we are to engage in
this activity–writing an essay, making a film, entertaining an audience, imparting information
and advice–we must discover models in our culture that tell us how this particular miracle is
achieved. Such models are found in common sense, law, religious traditions, increasingly in
scientific theories themselves. Traditionally, models of communication were found in religious
thought. For example, in describing the roots of the transmission view of communication in
nineteenth century American religious thought I meant to imply the following: religious
thought not only described communication; it also presented a model for the appropriate uses
of language, the permissible forms of human contact, the ends communication should serve,
the motives it should manifest. It taught what it meant to display.
Today models of communication are found less in religion than in science, but their
implications are the same. For example, American social science generally has represented
communication, within an overarching transmission view, in terms of either a power or an
anxiety model. These correspond roughly to what is found in information theory, learning
theory, and influence theory (power) and dissonance, balance theory, and functionalism or uses
and gratifications analysis (anxiety). I cannot adequately explicate these views here, but they
reduce the extraordinary phenomenological diversity of communication into an arena in which
people alternatively pursue power or flee anxiety. And one need only monitor the behavior of
modern institutions to see the degree to which these models create, through policy and
program, the abstract motives and relations they portray.
Models of communication are, then, not merely representations of communication but
representations for communication: templates that guide, unavailing or not, concrete processes
of human interaction, mass and interpersonal. Therefore, to study communication involves
examining the construction, apprehension, and use of models of communication themselves–
their construction in common sense, art, and science, their historically specific creation and use:
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in encounters between parent and child, advertisers and consumer, welfare worker and
supplicant, teacher and student. Behind and within these encounters lie models of human
contact and interaction.
Our models of communication, consequently, create what we disingenuously pretend they
merely describe. As a result our science is, to use a term of Alvin Gouldner's, a reflexive one.
We not only describe behavior; we create a particular corner of culture–culture that determines,
in part, the kind of communicative world we inhabit.
Raymond Williams, whose analysis I shall follow in conclusion, speaks to the point:
Communication begins in the struggle to learn and to describe. To start this process
in our minds and to pass on its results to others, we depend on certain
communication models, certain rules or conventions through which we can make
contact. We can change these models when they become inadequate or we can
modify and extend them. Our efforts to do so, and to use the existing models
successfully, take up a large part of our living energy.... Moreover, many of our
communication models become, in themselves, social institutions. Certain attitudes
to others, certain forms of address, certain tones and styles become embodied in
institutions which are then very powerful in social effect These arguable
assumptions are often embodied in solid, practical institutions which then teach the
models from which they start (1966:1920).
This relation between science and society described by Williams has not been altogether
missed by the public and accounts for some of the widespread interest in communication. I am
not speaking merely of the contemporary habit of reducing all human problems to problems or
failures in communication. Let us recognize the habit for what it is: an attempt to coat reality
with cliches, to provide a semantic crucifix to ward off modern vampires. But our appropriate
cynicism should not deflect us from discovering the kernel of truth in such phrases.
If we follow Dewey, it will occur to us that problems of communication are linked to problems
of community, to problems surrounding the kinds of communities we create and in which we
live. For the ordinary person communication consists merely of a set of daily activities: having
conversations, conveying instructions, being entertained, sustaining debate and discussion,
acquiring information. The felt quality of our lives is bound up with these activities and how
they are carried out within communities.
Our minds and lives are shaped by our total experience–or, better, by representations of
experience and, as Williams has argued, a name for this experience is communication. If one
tries to examine society as a form of communication, one sees it as a process whereby reality is
created, shared, modified, and preserved. When this process becomes opaque, when we lack
models of and for reality that make the world apprehensible, when we are unable to describe
and share it; when because of a failure in our models of communication we are unable to
connect with others, we encounter problems of communication in their most potent form.
The widespread social interest in communication derives from a derangement in our models of
communication and community. This derangement derives, in turn, from an obsessive
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commitment to a transmission view of communication and the derivative representation of
communication in complementary models of power and anxiety. As a result, when we think
about society, we are almost always coerced by our traditions into seeing it as a network of
power, administration, decision, and control–as a political order.
Alternatively, we have seen society essentially as relations of property, production, and trade–
an economic order. But social life is more than power and trade (and it is more than therapy as
well). As Williams has argued, it also includes the sharing of aesthetic experience, religious
ideas, personal values and sentiments, and intellectual notions–a ritual order.
Our existing models of communication are less an analysis than a contribution to the chaos of
modern culture, and in important ways we are paying the penalty for the long abuse of
fundamental communicative processes in the service of politics, trade, and therapy. Three
examples. Because we have looked at each new advance in communications technology as an
opportunity for politics and economics, we have devoted it, almost exclusively, to matters of
government and trade. We have rarely seen these advances as opportunities to expand
people's powers to learn and exchange ideas and experience. Because we have looked at
education principally in terms of its potential for economics and politics, we have turned it into
a form of citizenship, professionalism and consumerism, and increasingly therapy. Because we
have seen our cities as the domain of politics and economics, they have become the residence
of technology and bureaucracy. Our streets are designed to accommodate the automobile, our
sidewalks to facilitate trade, our land and houses to satisfy the economy and the real estate
speculator.
The object, then, of recasting our studies of communication in terms of a ritual model is not
only to more firmly grasp the essence of this "wonderful" process but to give us a way in which
to rebuild a model of and for communication of some restorative value in reshaping our
common culture.
NOTES
1 For further elaboration on these matters, see chapter 4.
2 For an interesting exposition of this view, see Lewis Mumford (1967).
3 The only treatment of news that parallels the description offered here is William Stephenson's
The Play Theory of Mass Communication (1967). While Stephenson's treatment leaves much to
be desired, particularly because it gets involved in some largely irrelevant methodological
questions, it is nonetheless a genuine attempt to offer an alternative to our views of
communication.
4 These contrasting views of communication also link, I believe, with contrasting views of the
nature of language, thought, and symbolism. The transmission view of communication leads to
an emphasis on language as an instrument of practical action and discursive reasoning, of
thought as essentially conceptual and individual or reflective, and of symbolism as being
preeminently analytic. A ritual view of communication, on the other hand, sees language as an
instrument of dramatic action, of thought as essentially situational and social, and symbolism
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as fundamentally fiduciary.
5 This is not to suggest that language constitutes the real world as Emst Cassirer often seems to
argue. I wish to suggest that the world is apprehensible for humans only through language or
some other symbolic form.
6 This formulation, as with many other aspects of this essay, is heavily dependent on the work
of Clifford Geertz (see Geertz, 1973).
7 We, of course, not only produce a world; we produce as many as we can, and we live in easy
or painful transit between them. This is the problem Alfred Schutz (1967) analyzed as the
phenomenon of "multiple realities." I cannot treat this problem here, but I must add that some
such perspective on the multiple nature of produced reality is necessary in order to make any
sense of the rather dismal area of communicative "effects."
8 The example and language are not fortuitous. Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions (1962) can be seen as a description of how a scientific world is produced
(paradigm creation), maintained (paradigm articulation, training, through exemplars, of a new
generation of scientists), repaired (by dismissing anomalous phenomena, discounting counter
evidence, forcing nature more strenuously into conceptual boxes), and transformed (in
revolutions and their institutionalization in textbooks and scientific societies).
9 See Dewey (1927). To maintain continuity in the argument, let me stress, by wrenching a line
of Thomas Kuhn's out of context, the relation between model building and community: "The
choice . . . between competing paradigms proves to be a choice between incompatible modes of
community life" (1962: 92).
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