Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Research

Faculty members and graduate students in the Department pursue and produce research that spans a wide range of the Communication discipline. 

Research within the department is generally focused in three broad curriculum areas:

  • Communication Science & Social Cognition,
  • Public Relations & Strategic Communication, and
  • Rhetoric & Political Culture

The Department of Communication is also home to the Mark and Heather Rosenker Center for Political Communication & Civic Leadership and the Center for Health and Risk Communication

Sorry, no events currently present.

Show activities matching...

filter by...

Doing Black Digital Humanities with Radical Intentionality

Based on the auto-ethnographic work of a team who developed the first Black Digital Humanities program at a research institution, this book details how to centralize Black feminist praxes of care, ethics, & Black studies in the digital humanities.

Communication

Author/Lead: Catherine Knight Steele
Non-ARHU Contributor(s):

Jessica H. Lu and Kevin C. Winstead

Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
book

In this important and timely collection, the authors Catherine Knight Steele, Jessica H. Lu, and Kevin C. Winstead―of the first team of the African American Digital Humanities Initiative―center Black scholars, Black thought, and Black studies in creating digital research and programming. Providing insight into acquiring funding, building and maintaining community, developing curricula, and establishing a national network in the field, this book moves Black persons and Black thought from the margins to the center with a set of best practices and guiding questions for scholars, students, and practitioners developing programming, creating work agreements, building radically intentional pedagogy and establishing an ethical future for Black DH.

This is essential reading for researchers, students, scholars, and practitioners working in the fields of DH and Black studies, as well as graduate students, faculty, and administrators working in humanities disciplines who are interested in forming centers, courses, and/or research programs in Black digital studies.

Read More about Doing Black Digital Humanities with Radical Intentionality

Whiteness and Neoliberal Diversity: The (Re)production of Ideology through College Students’ Diversity Discourse

Based on interviews with 15 college students, I argue that college students’ diversity discourse functioned to (re)produce whiteness and neoliberal diversity by promoting individualism and meritocracy.

Communication

Author/Lead: Drew Ashby-King
Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
book

Diversity has become a proxy term used to talk about racism and other forms of systemic oppression on college campuses and in the classroom. Although scholars have suggested connecting diversity to power, privilege, and systemic oppression, whiteness can be used to challenge these systemic conversations bringing into question the usefulness of this suggestion. Based on interviews with 15 college students, I argue that college students’ diversity discourse functioned to (re)produce whiteness and neoliberal diversity by promoting individualism and meritocracy. I also suggest that instructors’ abilities to intervene in the (re)production of harmful ideologies are limited because students wanted classroom diversity discourse to focus on their perspectives and opinions which could challenge instructors’ attempts to connect individual discourses to systemic analyses. In turn, I propose dialogic instruction and critical communication pedagogy as an intervention. As instructors engage in these practices they should work to shift students’ understandings of racism, sexism, and other forms of oppression from an individual level toward systemic analyses.

Read More about Whiteness and Neoliberal Diversity: The (Re)production of Ideology through College Students’ Diversity Discourse

Naming, Blaming, and “Framing”: Kimberlé Crenshaw and the Rhetoric of Black Feminist Pedagogy

This article examines Kimberlé Crenshaw’s interview on Democracy Now! in 2015 and her 2016 TEDTalk, “The Urgency of Intersectionality,” to theorize Black women’s “activist rhetoric of blame.”

Communication

Author/Lead: Alisa Hardy
Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
book

This article examines Kimberlé Crenshaw’s interview on Democracy Now! in 2015 and her 2016 TEDTalk, “The Urgency of Intersectionality,” to theorize Black women’s “activist rhetoric of blame.” Crenshaw enacts three distinctive features of Black feminist pedagogy in her activism for the #SayHerName Campaign. She challenges traditional “frames” of antiBlack police brutality, uses blaming vocabulary from a Black woman’s standpoint to create new frames, and names an audiences’ “revolutionary potential” in dismantling misogynoir in the justice system. An activist rhetoric of blame expands frames in dominant discourses so that the collective blame toward an institution can encompass intersectional oppression.

Read More about Naming, Blaming, and “Framing”: Kimberlé Crenshaw and the Rhetoric of Black Feminist Pedagogy

The importance, significance, and relevance of communication: a fourth study of the criticality of the discipline’s content and pedagogy

The results of this study argue that communication, and specifically oral communication education, is critical to students’ future personal and professional success.

Communication

Contributor(s): Lindsey Anderson
Non-ARHU Contributor(s):

Sherwyn P. Morreale, Melissa A. Broeckelman-Post, Victoria A. Ledford & Joshua N Westwick

Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
CE

Similar to three earlier studies, thematic analysis of 2,155 articles, identified in academic and popular press publications extending from 2016 to 2020, provides support for the centrality of the communication discipline’s content and pedagogy. These results reinforce the importance of communication to promoting health communication; growing individually and in relation to others; enriching the educational enterprise; enhancing organizational processes; being a responsible community member locally, nationally, internationally, and globally; and addressing crises, safety, risk, security, and science communication. Subthemes are identified in each of these six thematic categories, and the results are compared with those of the three earlier iterations of this study and in light of major shifts in the sociopolitical and cultural environment in the U.S. and the globe since the last iteration.

Read More about The importance, significance, and relevance of communication: a fourth study of the criticality of the discipline’s content and pedagogy

Narrative Listening and the Quest for Peace

The article is a case study of the New Story Leadership project to bring delegates from Israel and Palestine to Washington each summer to listen to each other’s stories and to meet with members of Congress.

Communication

Author/Lead: Andrew D. Wolvin
Non-ARHU Contributor(s):

Annie Rappeport, Ph. D

Dates:
Publisher: Global Listening Centre
glc

Andrew Wolvin (Professor Emeritus, University of Maryland Department of Communication) , along with Annie Rappeport (Ph.D., M. Ed., University of Maryland Department of Communication), has published “Narrative Listening and the Quest for Peace,” in the January, 2023, issue of The Global Listener.  The article is a case study of the New Story Leadership project to bring delegates from Israel and Palestine to Washington each summer to listen to each other’s stories and to meet with members of Congress. In the same issue, Professor Wolvin is featured in an interview on the state of listening education and research in today’s world.

 

Read More about Narrative Listening and the Quest for Peace

“I am Trini, I am Indian, I am Hindu”: Diaspora identity and creating culture through pichakaree.

examines a Hindu-Trinidadian song genre’s value for community members to communicate cultural identity and to challenge notions of national culture.

Communication

Author/Lead: Maggie Griffith Williams
Dates:
Publisher: Global Girmit Institute
ggi

A few days before Phagwa 2019, a Hindu leader described her identity: ‘I am three parts - I am Trini, I am Indian, I am Hindu. I am equally patriotic. I have the same love and reverence for the land, but I am Indian…I am also Hindu, that's my identity.’ She explained that negotiating this trio of identities is a theme often appearing in pichakaarees, a local song form performed during Phagwa in Trinidad. Named after the instrument used to spray abeer [colored water], pichakaree songs were envisioned as a metaphor for ingesting from one’s locality and spraying it out to impress upon the audience’s minds with constructive messages. Based on interviews with pichakaree artists and organizers, as well as local intellectuals and scholars, I present preliminary analysis of pichakaaree’s value for community members, the negotiation of creating a space for the artform and recognition within national culture, and participants’ hopes and recommendations for its future.  

Read More about “I am Trini, I am Indian, I am Hindu”: Diaspora identity and creating culture through pichakaree.

How Solutions Journalism Shapes Support for Collective Climate Change Adaptation

Solutions journalism, an emerging practice focused on credible stories about responses to societal problems, may offer an alternate approach.

Communication

Author/Lead: Kathryn Thier
Contributor(s): Tong Lin
Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
ec

News media are the public’s primary source about risks such as climate change, but traditional journalistic approaches to climate change have failed to build support for collective social responses. Solutions journalism, an emerging practice focused on credible stories about responses to societal problems, may offer an alternate approach. From an online experiment with a convenience sample of U.S. undergraduates (N = 348), we found that solutions journalism stories were positively associated with perceived behavioral control, which mediated support for collective action for climate change adaptation. Additionally, attribution of responsibility to individuals and government, participant hope, and eco-anxiety were associated with support for collective action. Findings extend our understanding of how risk communication affects policy support for climate change adaptation and suggest that solutions journalism may allow journalists to communicate climate change’s danger without depressing support for social action to mitigate its effects.

Read More about How Solutions Journalism Shapes Support for Collective Climate Change Adaptation

Revisiting twentieth century argumentation through debate: The University of Puerto Rico’s 1928 tour of the United States

This essay makes the case for thinking about the history of debate across borders. In order to contribute to this special issue’s focus on argumentation in the Americas.

Communication

Author/Lead: Carly S. Woods
Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
AA

Speech and debate have been central in shaping traditions of argumentation in the United States. While much of debate history has focused on individual nation-states, attention to twentieth century intercollegiate debate tours offers one way for argumentation scholars to consider the transgeographic flows of argument exchange. This essay makes the case for thinking about the history of debate across borders. In order to contribute to this special issue’s focus on argumentation in the Americas, I offer the example of the University of Puerto Rico’s 1928 debate tour of the eastern United States, in which student debaters were able to ‘speak back’ to U.S. imperialism through embodied performances that compelled audiences to consider different perspectives on education, language, citizenship, and sovereignty.

Read More about Revisiting twentieth century argumentation through debate: The University of Puerto Rico’s 1928 tour of the United States

“A symbol of service and sacrifice, mourning and memory”: Public relations and public memory the 100th year commemoration of the tomb of the unknown soldier

To date, limited research has explored the concept of public memory in public relations research, although public relations practitioners play an essential role in the agenda-setting that shapes understanding of an event.

Communication

Author/Lead: Victoria McDermott
Contributor(s): Lindsey Anderson
Dates:

 

Public memory is the conceptual process through which understandings about a historic event are defined, informed, and reshaped. This concept is important for public relations practitioners as public memory provides substance for the communicative process providing the space to establish shared meanings for members of a given public. One example of the role of public relations practitioners in crafting public memory was the 100th anniversary celebration of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (TUS), termed #TUS100 in November 2021. In order to understand what and how memory was communicated through the #TUS100 event, we completed an interpretive thematic analysis of the materials created and distributed by the Arlington National Cemetery Office of Public Affairs related to the 100th year Tomb Commemoration and video clips from three popular national news outlets (ABC, CBS, NBC). In doing so we found that public memory is an evolving narrative that has the potential to create/reaffirm relationships—both of which have implications for public relations scholarship and practice.

 

Read More about “A symbol of service and sacrifice, mourning and memory”: Public relations and public memory the 100th year commemoration of the tomb of the unknown soldier

Understanding the psychological antecedents of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among Black Americans: implications for vaccine communication

Examination of the psychological antecedents of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among Black Americans

Communication

Author/Lead: Kathryn Thier
Contributor(s): Yuan Wang, Xiaoli Nan
Non-ARHU Contributor(s):

Clement Adebamowo, Shana O. Ntiri, Sandra Crouse Quinn

Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
JCH

Guided by the 5C (confidence, complacency, constraints, calculation, and collective responsibility) model of vaccination behavior, we examine the psychological antecedents of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance (i.e. attitudes and intentions toward COVID-19 vaccination) among Black Americans, a group disproportionately affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

Read More about Understanding the psychological antecedents of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among Black Americans: implications for vaccine communication