Skip to main content
Skip to main content

University of Maryland Communication Home

COMM Department 2025 Award Winners

Congratulations to this year's departmental award winners!

Read More about COMM Department 2025 Award Winners

Dept. of Communication's Graduate Program wins Award for Graduate Student Mentorship

We are very proud of our Graduate Program!

Read More about Dept. of Communication's Graduate Program wins Award for Graduate Student Mentorship

Register for Summer 2025 COMM Courses!

Satisfy a requirement AND stay on track for graduation. Register for Summer Session today! #KeepLearningUMD

Read More about It's Time to Register for Summer 2025 COMM Courses!

17th Annual Grunig Lecture

Dr. Krishnamurthy Sriramesh presents "Culture and Public Relations: A Global Program of Research"

Read More about 17th Annual Grunig Lecture

Explore Communication at UMD

Undergraduate Students

Interested in our undergraduate program?

The Department of Communication at the University of Maryland offers a B.A. in communication, a rhetoric minor and an oral communication program. Communication is a Top Ten major at the University of Maryland and has been for ten years.


Graduate Students

Graduate Students


Faculty and Staff Information

Faculty and Staff Information

Search our directory to learn about our faculty and staff, or access resources relevant to faculty and staff.


The U.S. Empire Remembers Violence Against Asian Women: “Comfort Women” Monuments and Transnational Global Memoryscapes

New article in WSiC on memory studies and the San Francisco “Comfort Women” Column of Strength

Communication

Author/Lead: Jin R. Choi
Dates:

This paper offers a rhetorical analysis to read the San Francisco “Comfort Women” Column of Strength memorial within the context of the United States’ historical violence against Asian women with white sexual imperialism as a theoretical lens. Utilizing in situ rhetorical field methods and critical rhetorical criticism, I contend that the San Francisco “Comfort Women” Column of Strength memorial illuminates how the medium of a public memorial faces certain constraints and difficulties in being able to name and critique U.S. imperialism as a historical narrative to be publicly remembered in dominant national memory. I offer transnational global memoryscape, extending Phillips and Reyes’ global memoryscape, as a concept that necessarily draws our attention specifically towards unequal forces of power across borders, such as Western imperialist forces in Asia. Ultimately, a critical, transnational lens on public memory is imperative to situate national public memories within a global context as memories flow across borders.

Read More about The U.S. Empire Remembers Violence Against Asian Women: “Comfort Women” Monuments and Transnational Global Memoryscapes

Why Diplomacy Demands More Than Intelligence

Recent Scholarship on Diplomacy and Intelligence!

Communication

Author/Lead: Lamia Zia
Dates:

In "Why Diplomacy Demands More Than Intelligence," Lamia Zia and Andrew Rolander grapple with important issues relating to diplomacy. Situating their arguments in historical context, the researchers describe how diplomacy and intelligence share a symbiotic relationship, where one informs the other and neither can operate alone. Zia and Rolander ultimately argue that, "Diplomacy’s true power lies not just in what you know, but in how you use it to connect, persuade, and lead." 

Read More about Why Diplomacy Demands More Than Intelligence

Diversifying the Space of Podcasting: Access, Identity, and Reflective Practices

New book featuring COMM Tegan Bratcher & Briana Barner!

Communication

Author/Lead: Tegan R. Bratcher
Contributor(s): Briana Barner
Dates:

New book, Diversifying the Space of Podcasting: Access, Identity, and Reflective Practices, written by Alexis Romero Walker and COMM Lecturer Tegan Bratcher was published by Rowman & Littlefield. 

The publisher states, "As the podcast studies field continues to gain momentum both within academia and in practice, scholars have been mapping and exploring the podcasting landscape from a variety of perspectives. This edited volume highlights the diverse spaces that podcasts embody and create, amplifying the unique and understudied perspectives and voices of podcasting. Through a multitude of interdisciplinary approaches, contributors explore the various cultural, racial, and identity-based markers undergirding the richness of the platform and argue that by understanding diverse content and content creators, we enrich the field of podcast studies as a whole. Scholars of media, communication, cultural, podcast, and critical race studies – among others – will find this book to be particularly useful."

The book features a chapter by COMM Assistant Professor, Briana Barner, on Black podcasting. Congrats to all on this excellent anthology! 

Read More about Diversifying the Space of Podcasting: Access, Identity, and Reflective Practices