Communication Theory As A Field
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unite them, no contentious issues that divide them. For the most part,
they simply ignore each ~ t h e r . ~
College courses in communication theory are increasingly offered at
all levels, and numerous textbooks are being published. However, a closer
look at their contents only further demonstrates that, although there
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Roots of Incoherence
The incoherence of communication theory as a field can be explained by
communication theory’s multidisciplinary origins and by the particular
ways in which communication scholars have used and too often mis-
used the intellectual fruits that continue to pour from this multidisci-
plinary horn of plenty.
Multidisciplinary Origins
One of the most interesting facts about communication theory is that it
has cropped up more or less independently in so many different aca-
demic disciplines. Littlejohn (1982),in what may be still the closest thing
we have to a comprehensive schematic overview, traced contributions to
communication theory from disciplines as diverse as literature, math-
ematics and engineering, sociology, and psychology.6 Budd and Ruben’s
( 1972) anthology of communication theory included chapters represent-
ing 24 disciplinary approaches in alphabetical order from anthropology
to zoology.
The communication discipline initially tried to set itself up as a kind
of interdisciplinary clearinghouse for all of these disciplinary approaches.
This spirit of interdisciplinarity is still with us and deserves to be culti-
vated as one of our more meritorious qualities. The incorporation of so
many different disciplinary approaches has made it very hard, however,
to envision communication theory as a coherent field. What, if any-
thing, do all of these approaches have to do with each other? Developed
within various disciplines to address various intellectual problems, they
are, in Kuhn’s ( 1 970) sense of the term, incommensurable: They neither
agree nor disagree about anything, but effectively bypass each other be-
cause they conceive of their nominally shared topic, communication, in
such fundamentally different ways.
Dance (1970) reviewed 95 published definitions of communication
that had appeared in the 50s and 60s.’ He concluded that the defini-
tions differed in so many ways (he distinguished 15 conceptual compo-
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versity, argument, debate, even at the cost of occasional lapses into aca-
demic sniping. The goal should not be a state in which we have nothing
to argue about, but one in which we better understand that we all have
something very important to argue about.
If, however, we should not chase after the chimera of a unified theory,
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Typically, the proposed model is defined largely by contrast with its dia-
lectical opposite, a transmission, or informational, model of communi-
cation that, it is claimed, continues to dominate lay and much academic
thought (Carey, 1989; Cronen, 1995; Deetz, 1994; Pearce, 1989; Peters,
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Rhetorical Semiotic Phenomenological Cybernetic Sociopsychological Sociocultural Critical
Communication The practical art Intersubjective Experience of Information Expression, inter- (Re)productionof Discursive
theorized as: of discourse mediation by signs otherness; dialogue processing action, & influence social order reflection
Problems of Social exigency Misunderstanding Absence of, or Noise; overload; Situation requiring Conflict; alienation; Hegemonic
communication requiring collective or gap between failure to sustain, underload; a manipulationof misalignment; ideology;
theorized as: deliberation and subjective authentic human malfuction or causes of behavior failure of systematically
judgment viewpoints relationship "bug" in a system to achieve specified coordination distorted speech
outcomes situation
Metadiscursive Art, method, Sign, symbol, Experience, self Source, receiver, Behavior, variable, Society, structure, Ideology, dialectic,
vocabulary communicator, icon, index, & other, dialogue, signal, information,effect, personality, practice, ritual, oppression,
such as: audience, strategy, meaning, referent, genuineness, noise, feedback, emotion, perception, rule, socialization, consciousness-
commonplace, code, language, supportiveness. redundancy, cognition, attitude, culture, identity, raising, resistance,
logic, emotion medium, openness network, function interaction coconstruction emancipation
(mis)understanding
Plausible when Power of words; Understanding All need human Identity of mind Communication The individual is a Self-perpetuation
appeals to value of informed requires common contact, should and brain; value of reflects personality; product of society; of power &wealth;
metadiscursive judgment; language; omni- treat others as information and beliefs & feelings every society has a values of freedom,
commonplaces improvability of present danger of persons, respect logic; complex bias judgments; distinct culture; equality & reason;
such as: practice miscommunication differences, seek systems can be people in groups social actions have discussion
m m o n ground unprediile affect one another unintendedeffects produces aware-
ness, insight
Interestingwhen Mere words are not Words have correct Communication is Humans and Humans are rational Individualagency Naturalness &
challenges actms; appearance meanings 8 stand skill; the word is machines differ; beings; we know & responsibility; rationalityof tradi-
metadiscursive is not rearii; style for thoughts; codes not the thing; facts e m d i is not our own minds; we absolute identity of tional social order;
commonplaces is not substance; & media are neutral are obpctwe and logml;linear order know what we see self; naturalness of objectiiily of sci-
such as: opinion is not truth channels values subjective of cause & effect the social order ence & technology
c)
w
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Rhetorical Semiotic Phenomenological Cybernetic Sociopsychological Sociocultural Critical
Against The art of hetoric We do not use Strategic communi- Intervention in Rhetoric lacks good Rhetorical theory is Rhetoric reflects
rhetoric can be learned only signs; rather they cation is inherently complex systems empirical evidence culture bound & traditionalist,
by practice; theory use us inauthentic & often involves technical that its persuasive overemphasizes instrumentalist, &
merely distracts counterproductive problems rhetoric techniques actually individual agency individualist
fails to grasp work as intended vs. social structure ideologies
Against All use of signs is Langue is a fic- Langue-parole & “Meaning” con- Semiotics fails to Sign systems aren’t Meaning is not
semiotics rhetorical tion: meaning & signifier-signified sists of functional explain factors that autonomous; they fixed by a code; it
intersubjectivity are fake distinctions. relationships with- influence the produc- exist only in the is a site of social
are indeterminate Languaging in dynamic infor- tion 8 interpretation shared pmctices of conflict
constitutes world mation systems of messages actual communities
Against Authenticity is a Self & other are Other‘s experience Phenomenological Phenomenological Intersubjectivity is Individual
phenomen- dangerous myth; semiotically deter- is not experienced “experience” must introspection falsely produced by social consciousness is
ology good communica- termined subject directly but only as occur in the brain assumes self-aware- processes that socially consti-
tion must be artful, positions 8 exist constituted in ego’s as information ness of cognitive phenomenology tuted, thus ideolo-
hence strategic only idas signs consciousness processing processes fails to explain gically distorted
Against Practical reason Functionalist Functionalism fails The observer must Cybernetics is too Cybernetic models Cybernetics re-
cybernetics cannot (or should explanations to explain meaning be included in the rationalistic; e.g.. it fail to explain how flects the domi-
not) be reduced to ignore subtleties as embodied, con- system, rendering underestimates the meaning emerges nance of instru-
formal calculation of sign systems scious experience it indeterminate role of emotion in social interaction mental reason
Against Effects are Sociopsycholo- The subject-object Communication Sociopsychological Sociopsychological Sodopsychdogy
sociopsycho- situational and gical “effects” are dichotomy of socio- involves circular theories have limited “laws” are culture reflects ideologies
logy cannot be precisely internal properties psychology must be causation, not predictive power, bound 8 biased by of individualism,
predicted of sign systems transcended linear causation even in laboratory individualism instrumentalism
Against Sociocultural rules, Sociocultural The social life-world The functional Sociocultural theory Sociocultural order Sociocultural
sociocultural etc., are contexts 8 rules, etc., are all has a organization of is vague, untestable, is particular 8 theory privileges
theory resources for rhe- systems of signs phenomenological any social system ignores psychological locally negotiated consensusover
torical discourse foundation can be modeled processes that under- but theory must be conflict & change
formally lie all social order abstract 8 general
Against Practical reason is There is nothing Critique is Self-organizing Critical theory Critical theory im- Critical theory is
critical based in particular outside the text immanent in every systems models confuses facts 8 pases an interpretive elitist 8 without
theory situations, not uni- authentic encounter account for social values, imposes a frame, fails to appre- real influence on
versal principles with tradition conflict & change dogmatic ideology date local meanings social change
Communication Theory as a Field
In the tradition of rhetorical theory that originated with the ancient Greek
sophists and runs through a long and varied history down to the present,
communication has typically been theorized as a practical art of dzs-
course.16This way of theorizing communication is useful for explaining
why our participation in discourse, especially public discourse, is impor-
tant and how it occurs, and holds forth the possibility that the practice
of communication can be cultivated and improved through critical study
and education. Problems of communication in the rhetorical tradition
are conceived as social exigencies that can be resolved through the artful
use of discourse to persuade audiences (Bitzer, 1968).
Rhetorical theory seems plausible and useful because it appeals to
certain commonplace beliefs about communication. We all know that
rhetoric is a powerful force in society. Most will readily agree that in
matters of opinion it is good to hear about different sides of a question
before reaching our own judgment, so rhetoric seems to be basically
necessary and useful, even though it is too often poorly done, annoying,
or even seriously harmful. For such reasons, it is important for us to
understand how rhetoric works and to cultivate our abilities as critical
consumers as well as effective producers of rhetoric. We know that some
people are better communicators than others, and that the best examples
of rhetoric can rise to the level of great art. Since we know that commu-
nicators vary in wisdom and skill, and that skill, if not wisdom, can
often be improved through instruction and practice, it is reasonable to
think that people can become better communicators by learning and
practicing methods of communication that can be invented or discov-
ered through research and systematically taught. Moreover, once we
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Semiotics, the study of signs, like rhetoric, has ancient roots (Manetti,
1993), but semiotics as a distinct tradition of communication theory can
be said to have originated in the language theory of John Locke (the
much neglected Book III).l’ This tradition runs through Peirce and
Saussure, whose seminal works founded two quite different disciplines
of semiotics, and continues down to current theories of language, dis-
course, interpretation, nonverbal communication, culture, and media.
In the semiotic tradition, communication is typically theorized as
intersubjective mediation by signs. Communication theorized in this way
explains and cultivates the use of language and other sign systems to
mediate between different perspectives. Problems of communication in
the semiotic tradition are primarily problems of (re)presentation and
transmission of meaning, of gaps between subjectivities that can be
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[Tlhe kinds of “why” questions communication scholars choose to answer may differ
from those that intrigue psychologists. . . . As communication theorists, we also need to
understand when, how, and why interaction alters sender behavior patterns and receiver
judgments. (Burgoon & Buller, 1996, pp. 316-317)
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ness and irrationality challenge our commonsense faith in our own per-
sonal autonomy.22Moreover, social psychology skeptically questions all
unproven assumptions about causal influences on human behavior, for
which it requires-and attempts to provide-rigorous experimental evi-
dence. It criticizes rhetoric, for example, for lacking proof that its per-
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in the long run, “produces” the very social order that makes interaction
possible in the first place. A central problem of sociocultural theory is
thus to find the right balance, that is, to sort out the complex relations
between production and reproduction, micro and macro, agency and
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forces, and insensitivity to cultural differences and calls, again and again,
for sociopsychologically dominated communication research to adopt a
more cultural or social approach.2s Likewise, it criticizes classical rheto-
ric for its naive assumptions about agency (in portraying great orators
as shapers of history, for example) and semiotics for abstracting signs
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Author
Robert T. Craig is an associate professor in the Department of Communication, University of Colo-
rado, Boulder. Portions of this article were presented in earlier versions as the Second Annual
Lecture in Human Communication, Indiana University, Bloomington, October 16, 1996, and at
annual conferences of the International Communication Association, Montreal, May 1997, and
the National Communication Association, Chicago, November 1997.
Notes
’ For a far from complete sample of recent books presenting original work explicitly on general
communication theory, without regard to disciplinary origin but excluding work on more specific
topics like media effects or interpersonal relationships, see Altheide (1995),Anderson (1996),An-
gus & Langsdorf (1992), Carey (1989), Chang (1996), Deetz (1992), Goodall (1996), Greene
(1997),Harris (1996),Hauser (1996),Kaufer & Carley (1993), Leeds-Hurwitz (1995),Mantovani
(1996),Mortensen (1994),Mortensen with Ayres (1997),Norton & Brenders ( 1 9 9 9 , Pearce (1989),
Pilotta & Mickunas (1990),Rothenbuhler (1998),Sigman (1995b),Stewart ( 1 9 9 9 ,J. Taylor (1993),
T. Taylor (1992),Theall (1995).
* There are some indicators of a field (see Anderson, 1996; Craig, 1989). Further, histories of
communication theory are beginning to appear (Mattelart, 1996; Schiller, 1996), and collective
works (handbooks, encyclopedias, anthologies) of varying currency, inclusiveness, and usefulness
can be found (e.g., Arnold & Bowers, 1984; Barnouw et al., 1989; Casmir, 1994; Cobley, 1996;
Crowley & Mitchell, 1994; Cushman & Kovacic, 1995; Kovacic, 1997; Philipsen & Albrecht,
1997).
Communication theory comes from many different academic disciplines, and scholars notori-
ously ignore work published outside their own disciplines. Hence, they tend to write about com-
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munication while paying no attention to work being done anywhere else, most especially within the
communication discipline proper. To their credit, communication scholars themselves have tended
to deviate from this pattern. They frequently cite work from other disciplines. Indeed, often they
are more likely to cite work from outside than inside their own discipline. Hence, they tend not to
cite each other, beyond their own little cliques, which has the unintended consequence that commu-
nication scholars are relatively little cited by anyone either inside o r outside of their own discipline
other disciplines, since disciplines themselves are social constructs that, like all social constructs,
are constituted symbolically through communication? Yes, of course, but only as a joke! Virtually
any discipline can claim to be the “fundamental” social discipline based on some tortured argu-
ment in which all social processes become fundamentally cognitive, economic, political, cultural-
or indeed, why not chemical or subatomic? The irony that makes the joke funny is that every
discipline occupies the precise center of the universe in its own perspective. Communication is n o
exception, but communication as a metaperspective-a perspective on perspectives-may help us
to appreciate the irony of our situation.
See especially Deetz (1994); also see Carey (1989), Pearce (1989), and Shepherd (1993). The
idea that communication has an essential role in the formation of democratic community has philo-
sophical roots in American pragmatism. For classic statements of this view, see Dewey (1916,
1927) and McKeon (1957).
This logical paradox, that communication exists only as constituted by communication (but
gee, what constitutes the communication that constitutes communication?), has been well explored
within the cybernetic tradition of communication theory (e.g., Bateson, 1972; Krippendorff, 1997;
Luhmann, 1992). It is but one manifestation of the paradoxical reflexivity between meaning and
context, or message and metamessage, that characterizes all communication.
I ’ Carey (1989). McKinzie (19Y4), Reddy (1979),and Taylor (1992)all suggest that communica-
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For classic statements of this functionalist view of mind, see Bateson (1972)and Dennett (1979).
l9 Kaufer & Butler (1996)can be regarded as a hybrid of rhetoric and cybernetics.
For various blends of the two,see Cherry (1966);Eco (1976);Wilden (1972).
21 Krippendorff‘s recent work (e.g., 1993) represents a movement from cybernetics towards phe-
nomenology that retains significant traces of the former. Several chapters in Steier’s ( 199 1 ) anthol-
ogy on reflexivity display similar tendencies.
z2 As Herman points out, the rise of psychology as a cultural worldview during the 20th century
medium, or media in general, can be linked to one of three underlying metaphors for what a me-
dium is. . . media as conduits, media as languages, media as environments” (1993, p. 56). In the
sociopsychological tradition, media are conduits; in the semiotic tradition, they are languages; in
the sociocultural tradition, they are environments.
z4 Recent attempts to strike a balance between the two poles include, for example, structuration
theory (Giddens, 1984), practice theory (Bourdieu, 1992), and ecological models (e.g., Altheide,
1995; Mantovani, 1996).
z‘ Recent calls for a “constitutive” or “communicational” communication theory have often fol-
lowed this line of argument; see, for example, Carey (1989), Sigman (1992, 1995a, 1995b), and
several chapters in Leeds-Hurwitz (1995).Also see Sigman (1987) and Thomas (1980).
z6 For a recent symposium illustrating the current centrality of Habermas in this tradition, see
Huspek (1997).
z7 On cybernetic principles of good communication, a user-friendly representation of communica-
tion theory should be structured so as to facilitate efficient cognitive processing. Based on Miller’s
(1956) classic theory of human information-processing capacity, this would limit the number of
distinct “traditions” (or “chunks”) of theory that could be included at any one level of the theoreti-
cal scheme to about seven, which happens to be the precise number of traditions in the present
matrix.
Methods and standards for testing or critically assessing practical communication theory raise
complex issues beyond the scope of the present essay. See Craig (1995, 1996b) and Craig & Tracy
(1995)for work that broaches discussion on these issues.
z9 This is consistent with Jonson and Toulmin’s view that the application of theory in practice is
inherently rhetorical and perspectival rather than “geometrical” or formally deductive ( 1988, p.
293). Alternative theories are not mutually exclusive but offer limited, complementary perspectives
on practical problems (Craig, 1996b).
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