"In Global Dialectics in Intercultural Communication, communication professors Jolanta A. Drzewiecka and Thomas K. Nakayama have compiled a wonderfully complex, rich, and diverse set of chapters that help to understand communication globally. Each chapter examines an interesting communication problematic, ranging from the construction of 'bad women' to the 'right' bodies of sex workers. In each, a deep awareness of cultural context, privileges, social struggle, historical and contemporary markers of difference, and geopolitical and globalizing features of culture-scapes broadly make this book a must-read in communication courses that want to explore things from a global perspective."-Kent Ono, University of Utah (USA)
List of Figures - List of Tables - Contributors - Jolanta A. Drzewiecka/Thomas K. Nakayama: Introduction: Thinking Dialectically about Intercultural Communication on a Global Scale - Hans J. Ladegaard: The Destructiveness of Distance: Unfaithful Husbands and Absent Mothers in Domestic Migrant Worker Narratives - Melissa Steyn: Eden Recouped: White South Africans in Tanzania and Zambia - Heinz Bonfadelli/Mustafa Ideli/Andrea Piga: Swiss Media and Migration - Mohan J. Dutta/Dyah Pitaloka/Dazzelyn Zapata: Meanings of Health among Transgender Sex Workers in Singapore: A Culture-Centered Approach - Marouf Hasian, Jr./Nicholas Paliewicz: Thanatopolitical Spaces and Symbolic Counterterrorism at the National September 11 Memorial and Museum - Joseph Oduro-Frimpong: Glocalization and Popular Media: The Case of Akosua Political Cartoons - Maria Szmeja: The Silesians in a Global Perspective: Communication with the Dominant Group in the Local and National Context - Eliete da Silva Pereira/Massimo Di Felice: Communicative Forms of Indigenous Dwelling: The Digitalization of the Forest and Native Net-Activism in Brazil - Nilanjana Bardhan: Telling the Story of Ebola: Cosmopolitan Communication as a Framework for Public Relations in Local Global Contexts - Moon J. Lee: The Sinking of a Ferry, Sinking of Public Confidence: A Comparative Analysis of Government Crisis Management Cases - Rahul Mitra: Environmental Nonprofit Organizations and Networked Publics: Case Studies of Water Sustainability - Etsuko Kinefuchi: Production of the Internal Other in World Risk Society: Nuclear Power, Fukushima, and the Logic of Colonization - Shiv Ganesh: What's New about Global Social Justice Movements?.
Jolanta A. Drzewiecka (Ph.D., Arizona State University) is Assistant Professor of Intercultural Communication at Università della Svizzera italiana in Lugano, Switzerland. Her work focuses on migrant belonging, nationalism, and public memory. She has published in Communication Theory, Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, Critical Studies in Media Communication, and other journals.
Thomas K. Nakayama (Ph.D., University of Iowa) is Professor of Communication Studies at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. His works include Intercultural Communication in Contexts, Experiencing Intercultural Communication, and The Handbook of Critical Intercultural Communication. He was the founding editor of the Journal of International and Intercultural Communication.