EoC Publication Bulletin 2010

David Boromisza-Habashi dbh at COLORADO.EDU
Wed Dec 1 20:52:29 UTC 2010


Hi ETHNOCOMMers,

Please find below a bibliography of publications that list members
identified for me as instances of scholarship in (or with an eye on)
the EoC tradition. Enjoy!

Cheers, DBH

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Berry, M. (2009). The social and cultural realization of diversity: An
interview with Donal Carbaugh. Language and Intercultural
Communication, 9, 230-241. doi:10.1080/14708470903203058

Boromisza-Habashi, D. (2010). How are political concepts ‘essentially’
contested? Language & Communication, 30, 276-284.
doi:10.1016/j.langcom.2010.04.002

Carbaugh, D. (2009). Exploring cultural discourses in the news:
Telling stories differently. In D. Yang (Ed.), Intercultural
communication, media ethics, and professionalism: Essay collection
(pp. 567-580). Wuhan University, China, December 9-10.

Carbaugh, D. (2009). Coding personhood through cultural terms and
practices: Silence and quietude as a Finnish natural way of being. In
R. Wilkins & P. Isotalus (Eds.), Speech culture in Finland (pp.
43-61). Lanham, MD: University Press of America.

Carbaugh, D. (2010). An intellectual history of language and social
interaction research in communication. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), A
social history of language and social interaction research (pp.
369-384). Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

Carbaugh, D. (2010). Resituating cultural studies in communication:
Cultural discourse analysis. In Claudio Baraldi, Andrea Borsari, &
Augusto Carli (Eds.), Hybrids, differences, visions: On the study of
culture (pp. 101-116). Aurora, Colorado: The John Davies Group.

Carbaugh, D. (2010). Codes and Cultural Discourse Analysis. Oxford
University Press Bibliographies online.

Carbaugh, D. (2010). Ethnography of Communication. Oxford University
Press Bibliographies online.

Clarke, T., & Milburn, T. (2009).”Smells like folk life”:
Participants’ identity construction at Step It Up. In D. Endres, L.
Sprain, & T. Peterson (Eds.), Social movements to address climate
change: Local steps for global action (pp. 309-336). Amherst, NY:
Cambria Press.

Flanigan, J. (2010). Change Talk at iVillage.com. In L. Shedletsky &
J. Aitken (Eds.), Cases on online discussion and interaction:
Experiences and outcomes (pp. 319-333). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

Kent, S. J. (2009) A discourse of danger and loss: Interpreters on
interpreting for the European Parliament. In S. Hale & U. Ozolins
(Eds.), Quality in interpreting: A shared responsibility (pp. 55-70).
Amsterdam: Benjamins Translation Library.

Leighter, J., & Castor, T. (2009). What are we going to “talk about”
in this public "meeting"?: An examination of talk about communication
in the North Omaha Development Project. International Journal of
Public Participation, 3, 57-75.

Leighter, J. L., & Black, L. (2010). “I'm just raising the question”:
Terms for talk and practical metadiscursive argument in public
meetings. Western Journal of Communication, 74, 547-569.
doi:10.1080/10570314.2010.512281

Milburn, T. (2009). Nonprofit organizations: Creating membership
through communication. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

Milburn, T. (2010).The relevance of cultural communication: For whom
and in what respect? Forum: Has communication research made a
difference? Communication Monographs, 77, 440-442.

Miller, D. B., & Rudnick, L. (2010). A case for situated theory in
modern peacebuilding practice. Journal of Peacebuilding & Development,
5, 62-74.

Philipsen, G. (2010). Researching culture in contexts of social
interaction: An ethnographic approach, a network of scholars,
illustrative moves. In D. Carbaugh & P. M. Buzzanell (Eds.),
Distinctive qualities in communication research (pp. 87-105). New
York: Routledge.

Philipsen, G. (2010). Some thoughts on how to approach finding one’s
feet in unfamiliar cultural terrain. Communication Monographs, 77,
160-168. doi:10.1080/03637751003758243

Wilkins, R., & Isotalus, P. (Eds.). (2009). Speech culture in Finland.
Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America.

Witteborn, S. (2010). The role of transnational NGOs in promoting
global citizenship and globalizing communication practices. Language
and Intercultural Communication, 10, 358-372.
doi:10.1080/14708477.2010.497556

Witteborn, S., & Sprain, L.(2009). Grouping processes in a public
meeting from an ethnography of communication and cultural discourse
analysis perspective. International Journal of Public Participation,
3, 14-35.


-- 
David Boromisza-Habashi, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Communication
University of Colorado, 270 UCB
Boulder, CO 80309-0270, USA
Web: http://comm.colorado.edu/people.php?id=103

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