Sunday, October 26, 2014
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Spring 2015 Course offering in Communication & Culture
If you are looking for a great elective graduate
course for Spring 2015, please consider enrolling in
Com
828, Cross-Cultural Communication
meets Tuesdays 1:50 until 4:40 in S134 S. Kedzie (3
credits)
taught by Professor Mary Bresnahan
Topics covered:
Facework and
culture, Language, Culture & Identity,
Stakeholding
Theory, Updated Self-Construal Measure
Issues of health
promotion in Asia, Underserved populations in the US, Culturally sensitive
solutions to community problems, Sustainability and culture
Selected Publications on Communication & Culture
Selected Publications focusing on
Communication and Culture
Bresnahan, M. J., Zhuang, J., & Park, S. (2015
in press). Cultural
Perceptions of the Health and Cuteness of Fat Babies. International Journal of Communication
& Health.
Bresnahan, M.
J., & Zhuang, J. (2014). Special
Guest Editor Special Issue on Health Communication in China. The Urgency and
Necessity for Health Communication Research in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7, 1-8.
Bresnahan, M.
J., Zhuang, J., & Sun, S. (2013). Influence of smoking norms and gain-loss antismoking messages on young
Chinese adults. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 2,doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntt015
Zhuang, J.,
& Bresnahan, M.J. (2012). HIV/AIDS
stigmatization on Chinese Internet discussion forums: A content analysis
approach to HIV/AIDS stigma. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5,
227-242.
Bresnahan, M.,
& Lee, C. (2011). Activating
Stereotypes: Reactions to
dividing participants by race on Survivor:
Cook Islands. The Howard Journal of
Communications, 22, 64-82. doi:10.1080/10646175.2011.546746
Bresnahan, M.J.,
Guan, X. W., Smith, S.W., Wang, X., & Edmondson, J. (2010). The cultures of the soul: The effects
of spiritual beliefs on organ donation in China and the U.S. Chinese
Journal of Communication, 3, 133-146.
Bresnahan, M.
J., Guan, X. W., & Wang, X. (2009).
The Culture of the Body: Attitudes
toward Organ Donation in China and the U.S. Chinese
Journal of Communication, 1, 181-195.
Bresnahan,
M.I., & Flowers, K. (2008). The role of sport involvement in attitude
toward Native American sport mascots. Howard Journal of Communications, 19, 165-181.
Bresnahan, M.
J., Kagawa, N., Song, J. A., & Inoue, Y.
(2006). Players and whiners:
Responses to the depiction of gender In Japanese anime. Asian Journal of Communication, 16,
2, 207-217.
Bresnahan,
M. J., Levine, T. R., Shearman, S. M., Lee, S. Y., Park, C. Y., & Nebashi,
R. (2005). Multi-trait-multi-method self-construal
validity assessment In Korea, Japan, and the U. S. Human
Communication Research, 31. 33-59.
Bresnahan, M.
J., Ohashi, R., Morinaga, S., Yang, L., & Mosher, D. (2002). Cultural Differences in Responding to Criticism: Evidence from the People’s Republic of China,
Japan, and the U.S. Asian Journal of
Social Psychology, 5, 93-105.
Bresnahan, M.
J., Ohashi, R., Nebashi, R., Liu, W.Y., & Shearman, S. M. (2001).
Attitudinal and affective response toward accented English. Language and Communication, 12, 1-15
Bresnahan, M. J,
Inoue, Y., Liu, W. Y., & Nishida, T.
(2001). Changing gender roles in prime time television commercials in Japan, Taiwan,
Malaysia and the US. Sex Roles, 12, 117-131.
Bresnahan, M.
J., Ohashi, R., Nebashi, R., Liu, W.Y., & Liao, C.C. (2001). Assertiveness
as a predictor of compliance and resistance in Taiwan, Japan, and the U.S. Journal
of Asian Pacific Communication, 11, 135-159.
Bresnahan, M.I.,
Cai, D. H., & Rivers, A. (1994).
Saying 'no' in Chinese and English. Asian Journal of Communication, 4, 52-76.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
burnout in academe
RESEARCH
ARTICLE
Burnout
and Work Engagement of Academics in Higher
Education
Institutions: Effects of Dispositional Optimism
Nicolene
Barkhuizen1,
Sebastiaan Rothmann2*† & Fons J. R. van de Vijver3,4,5
1North-West University, Mafekeng, South Africa
2North-West University, Vanderbijlpark, South Africa
3Tilburg University, The Netherlands
4North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa
5University of Queensland, Australia
Abstract
The aim of this study was to
investigate the relationships among dispositional optimism, job demands and resources,
burnout, work engagement, ill health and organizational commitment of South
African academic staff in higher education institutions. A cross-sectional
survey design was used, with stratified random samples (N= 595) taken of
academics in South African higher education institutions. The results confirmed
that job demands and a lack of job resources contributed to burnout, whereas
job resources contributed to work engagement.
Dispositional optimism had a
strong direct effect on perceptions of job resources as well as strong indirect
effects (via job resources) on burnout, work engagement, ill health and organizational
commitment. The results of this study extend the dual-process model of burnout
and engagement by demonstrating the strong effects of dispositional optimism on
the constructs in the model.
Stress Health 30: 322–332 (2014) © 2013 John Wiley
& Sons, Ltd.
Friday, October 17, 2014
#bringbackourgirls
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29665165
Nigeria's military says it has
agreed a truce with Islamist militants Boko Haram - and that the schoolgirls
the group has abducted will be released.
Nigeria's chief of defence staff,
Alex Badeh, announced the truce. Boko Haram has not made a public statement.
The military has struggled to defeat
Boko Haram, which has been fighting an insurgency since 2009.
Boko Haram sparked global outrage
six months ago by abducting more than 200 schoolgirls.
The girls were seized in the
north-eastern town of Chibok in Borno state, and their continued captivity has
led to criticism of the Nigerian government's efforts to secure their release.
The hostages are thought to have
been taken to the vast Sambisa forest, along Nigeria's border with Cameroon.
Members of the Bring Back Our Girls
campaign said in a tweet on Friday: "We are
monitoring the news with huge expectations."
'Cautiously optimistic'
Air Chief Marshal Badeh revealed the
truce at the close of a three-day security meeting between Nigeria and
Cameroon. He said Nigerian soldiers would comply with the agreement.
Thursday, October 16, 2014
NCA Intercultural Division Newsletter, October 201
October 15, 2014 NEWSLETTER
Inside this issue:
Welcome to
the Newsletter by Jennifer Willis-Rivera.......................................................................... 2
Registration
Information for NCA Chicago 2014................................................................................. 2
Message from
the Chair by Yoshitaka Miike…………………………………………………… 3-4
IICD Slate Chicago 2014 by Chair Yoshitaka Miike …………………………………………. 4-9
Unit Planner’s Report NCA Chicago by Chair Amy Heuman …………………………….…..10-13
Reception at NCA and IICD
Honors Graduate Student Seminar by Bob Shuter ………….
14
IICD
Officers 2014…..…………………………………………………...………………...……. 15
Next
Newsletter Information…………………………………………………………………….. 15
WELCOME TO OUR FALL E-NEWSLETTER!
In this
issue, we include information about the Convention in Chicago, IICD top papers,
and scholarly opportunities. Is there anything you would like to have included
in subsequent newsletters? Do you know
of anyone who did not receive his or her newsletter? Any feedback you have may be directed to the
newsletter editor: Jennifer Willis-Rivera, Publications Chair
(jennifer.willis-rivera@uwrf.edu)
Registration
Fees
|
Convention
Registration Type |
Early
Bird Registration Registration with payment must be received by Friday, September 12. |
Advance
Registration Registration with payment must be received by Friday, September 12. |
Regular
Registration* Registrations received after October 31. |
NCA
Regular/Patron Member Rate** |
$150
|
$195
|
$240
|
NCA
Student Member Rate** |
$75
|
$115
|
$160
|
Non-Member
Rate |
$350
|
$400
|
$450
|
Life/Emeritus
Member |
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR, Yoshitaka
Miike
NCA Chicago 2014: IICD and the
“World on Fire”
Recent controversies over the
cases of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, and Michael Brown reminded me of the Los
Angeles riot and the Yoshihiro Hattori incident in 1992. I remember Professor
Yoshihiro Tsurumi in Baruch College at the City University of New York (the
first Japanese citizen who received a DBA from Harvard University and taught
President George W. Bush at Harvard Business School) speaking about the
question of race and human rights in the mainstream U.S. media. Every Japanese
who was planning to study in the United States at that time learned a new
English-language word freeze.
Internationally as well as domestically, to borrow Amy Chua’s words from the
title of her book (Anchor Books, 2004), we are living in the “world on fire.”
There is much to talk about at the upcoming NCA 100th Annual Meeting in Chicago
next month. How can our division and the fields of international and
intercultural communication play a vital role in putting off this fire and
bring more peace to the world?
Some answers may be found in this
year’s exciting IICD conference programs that Dr. Amy Heuman, our most capable
and caring Vice Chair and Unit Planner, prepared for us with the assistance of
many of you who submitted your papers/proposals to the IICD and/or served as
reviewers for the division. For you convenience, Amy included below all the paper
and panel-discussion sessions sponsored by our division (see Amy’s report on
pp. 10-13). I hope you will be able to attend many IICD sessions. It is truly
amazing that Amy had done all the program planning work while taking care of
her new baby—Eliana! On a special note, I would especially like to encourage
you to support our division’s first Honors Graduate Student Seminar by being
present and participating there. As always, with his wonderful sense of humor,
extraordinary organizing ability, and exceptional interpersonal skills, Dr.
Robert Shuter coordinated two fascinating seminar sessions with outstanding
graduate students and prominent senior scholars. The seminar is scheduled in
Palmer House Hilton (Crystal, 3rd Floor) from 2:00 pm to 4:45 pm on November 22
(Saturday) (see Bob’s report on p. 14).
Please plan to attend the IICD
Business Meeting, which will be held in Palmer House Hilton (Crystal 3rd Floor)
from 12:30 pm to 1:45 pm on November 21 (Friday). At this business meeting,
there will be elections for two IICD executive officers: Vice Chair-Elect and
Secretary. A new nominating committee (three slots) will be elected as well.
You can read the bios and statements of all the candidates for these positions
(see pp. 4-9). This year’s nominating committee—consisting of Dr. Ioana Cionea
(University of Oklahoma), Dr. Hairong Feng (University of Minnesota at Duluth),
and Dr. Sachi Sekimoto (Minnesota State University at Mankato)—did a terrific
job in developing a slate of excellent candidates for the elections. In
addition to the slate as presented, we will accept additional nominations from
the floor. The 2014 IICD Distinguished Scholarship Awards will also be
presented by Dr. Sara DeTurk, our Vice Chair-Elect, at the business meeting. As
Chair of this year’s awards nomination and selection committees, Sara did the
most careful, thoughtful, and fair-minded job. Like Amy, both intellectually
and institutionally, she is one of the most desirable and sought-after leaders
in the fields of international and intercultural communication.
With the sponsorship of Sage
Publications, our division will host the Annual IICD Reception for all division
members and their guests (Palmer House Hilton, Crystal, 3rd Floor, from 6:30 pm
to 8:00 pm on November 22, Saturday). Complimentary wine and snacks will be
served. At this reception, the 2014 Ralph Cooley Awards will be presented to
the author(s) of the highest rated paper submitted to the IICD. Also presented
will be the awards and checks to those graduate students whose papers were
competitively selected for our division’s first Honors Graduate Student
Seminar. So please reserve this date and time and have lots of fun!
Kiyoshi Miki (1897-1945), a
Japanese philosopher, made a perceptive observation: “Loneliness resides not in
the mountains but in the cities. Loneliness lies not within one person but
between many people” (The translation from Japanese to English is mine). What
he meant is that we feel lonely, not when we are physically alone, but when we
think that people do not understand us and accept us. Thus, loneliness is not
an individual and non-interaction problem, but a communal and communication
issue. Interpersonal, intercultural, and international conflict and violence in
the “world on fire” can be approached from this perspective of the ecology of
communication and the public health of human connections. It is my sincere hope
that NCA in Chicago will be an important step to lessen such communicative
loneliness first among IICD members and NCA members and then in the local
community and the global society.
As you can see, there is much in
store for our division at the NCA 100th Annual Convention. I look forward to
seeing all of you in Chicago next month!
NCA IIC DIVISION SLATE FOR CHICAGO 2014
VICE CHAIR-ELECT CANDIDATES
1) Mark C. Hopson (George Mason University)
Mark C. Hopson (Ph.D., Ohio
University) is associate professor of communication at George Mason University.
His research interests include issues in critical intercultural communication;
African American rhetorical traditions; and the communication of violence
prevention. Mark’s recent academic articles interrogate intercultural and
interracial responsibility. His books include Notes from the Talking Drum:
Exploring Black Communication and Critical Memory in Intercultural
Communication Contexts (Hampton Press); and (co-edited with Ronald L. Jackson)
Masculinity in the Black Imagination: Politics of Communicating Race and
Manhood (Peter Lang). Mark has demonstrated leadership within the National
Communication Association. In 2008 he served as chair of the African American
Communication and Culture Division. In 2010 he served as secretary for the
International and Intercultural Communication Division. Mark worked with the
GMU Presidential Taskforce to examine the relationship between the university
police department and the university community. He also served as the primary
communication expert for an international research project to reduce violent
crime in Trinidad and Tobago. Currently he is co-chair for the George Mason
University Campus Climate Committee to create safer environments for discourse
about cultural difference. Mark is a facilitator for “Changing Lives Through
Literature,” a nationally recognized alternative sentencing program for
juvenile offenders. In addition to numerous professional presentations, he has
conducted workshops on relationship abuse and sexual assault prevention for
more than 5,000 youth and young adults. In 2013 he received the “Community
Service Award” from the Dulles-Leesburg (VA) Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi
Fraternity, Inc. In 2011 he received the “Spirit of Martin Luther King Award”
from University Life, George Mason University, Fairfax.
.
2) Ann
Neville Miller (University of Central Florida)
Dr. Ann Neville Miller has actively taught,
researched, and served in the field of intercultural communication for over ten
years. Graduating from the University of Georgia in 2005, she won the Gerald R.
Miller dissertation award for her research on self-disclosure of positive
diagnosis of HIV in Kenya. She has since established research programs on
intercultural factors in health communication, and scholarly productivity of
communication faculty in sub-Saharan Africa. She has published over 35
peer-reviewed articles in journals like Journal
of International and Intercultural Communication, Health Communication, Journal
of Health Communication, AIDS and Behavior, and Communication Education, and co-edited a scholarly volume. At
Daystar University in Nairobi, Kenya, and now at the University of Central
Florida, she has taught undergraduate and graduate courses in intercultural
communication, persuasion, and health communication, receiving teaching awards
from both institutions. A member of the IICD for over a decade, Dr. Miller has
served as a paper reviewer for the division and been a member of the editorial
board for the Journal of International
and Intercultural Communication. She is convinced that disciplinary
knowledge can be effectively enlarged only when a multitude of standpoints are
brought to bear on our subject area, and that the dominance of a single
cultural paradigm in communication theory is a loss to all. A major part of her
vision for the IICD division, therefore, focuses on developing mechanisms to
strengthen support for young scholars from low and middle income nations to
contribute to the global scholarly conversation.
SECRETARY CANDIDATES
1) Melissa
L. Curtin (University of California at Santa Barbara)
Melissa L. Curtin (Ph.D., University of New Mexico, 2007). I currently
hold an interdisciplinary appointment at the University of California, Santa
Barbara as Researcher & Coordinator of Special Projects in Language,
Culture and Communication. As an Adjunct Assistant Professor, I also teach in
the Departments of Linguistics, Communication, and Global Studies. My critical
ethnographic research integrates theorizations of language, identity,
globalization and intercultural communication and has been published in several
edited volumes (Handbook of Critical Intercultural Communication; Globalizing Intercultural Communication: A
Reader; Seeking Identity: Language in Society; Linguistic
Landscape: Expanding the Scenery; Conflict, Exclusion, and Dissent in
the Linguistic Landscape) and peer-reviewed journals (International
Journal of Sociology of Language; Social Semiotics). I’ve been an
active member of IICD since 2004. During this time I’ve received a few awards
from IICD (Top Four Competitive Scholar Papers, 2014; Dissertation of the Year
Award, 2008; and Top Student Paper,
2007). In addition to presenting papers, I’ve had the
privilege of regularly serving as a reviewer, chair, and respondent and I also
served for two years on the Awards Nominating Committee (2009; 2010). I’ve
benefited greatly from participating in IICD
and would very much like the opportunity to further support its efforts by
serving as the division’s secretary
2) Bing Han
(University of South Carolina at Aiken)
I am an
Assistant Professor in the Department of Communications at University of South
Carolina-Aiken. My dissertation examines cross-culturally empathy’s effect on
the moral conflict between care and justice. A co-authored article with Dale
Hample, and David Payne, “The Aggressiveness of Playful Arguments,” won the
Daniel Rohrer Memorial Outstanding Research Award offered by NCA’s American
Forensics Association and was published in Argumentation.
The article co-authored with Edward Fink, “How do Statistical and Narrative
Evidence Affect Persuasion? The Role of Evidentiary Features,” was published in
Argumentation and Advocacy. Another
article co-authored with Deborah Cai, “Face Goals in Apology: A Cross-Cultural
Comparison of Chinese and U.S. Americans,” was published in Journal of Asian Pacific Communication.
I consider professional service as an important part of my academic career and
a great opportunity to give back to an intellectual community that I love. I have
strived to contribute to this community by serving as Chair of the Nominating
Committee for NCA’s Association of
Chinese Communication Scholars, volunteering to review conference
submissions, guest reviewing for journals, and giving guest talks on intercultural
communication. If elected Secretary of IICD, I will serve with integrity and
fulfill my duties by working enthusiastically to help advance IICD’s mission. I
sincerely appreciate this opportunity and your consideration of my candidacy.
Thank you.
3) Elizabeth
Root (Oregon State University)
Let me
introduce myself: I began my career as an English as a second/foreign language
teacher and spent a total of six years teaching English in China and South
Korea. These experiences prompted my interest to formally study intercultural
communication, so I pursued a doctoral degree at the University of New Mexico.
Currently, I am an Associate Professor in Speech Communication at Oregon State
University. My research focuses on issues of university internationalization,
cultural identity, and intercultural communication pedagogy. I would be happy
to serve the division as secretary. Previously, I have served as a reviewer and
have chaired panels for the division, and it would be an honor to step up to a
more official role to support the division.
SECRETARY CANDIDATES
1) Bo Feng
(University of California at Davis)
Bo Feng (Ph.D., Purdue University) is an associate
professor in the Department of Communication at University of California, Davis.
Dr. Feng’s primary research interests lie in the area of supportive
communication. She has published work that examines the processes through which
people seek, provide, and respond to various forms of support, especially
comforting and advice, and how these processes are similar and different for
people from different cultural backgrounds.
2) Brandi
Lawless (University of San Francisco)
I am an
Assistant Professor in the Communication Studies Department at the University
of San Francisco. I have been an active member of the IICD for 7 years. I
define my research as critical intercultural communication and have a
particular interest in the intersections of race and class, the hegemonic
(re)production of poverty, and intercultural alliance building. Much of my
research explores these issues within nonprofit contexts. I am currently
co-editing a special issue of our division’s journal, Journal of
International and Intercultural Communication, on intercultural
communication with/in nonprofit contexts. If elected, I would be honored to
serve our division in this capacity.
3) Jieyoung
Kong (Western Kentucky University)
Jieyoung Kong
is an assistant professor at the Department of Communication at Western
Kentucky University where she teaches courses in intercultural communication
and research methods at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. Her
research interest focuses on intercultural and international communication,
transculturation, communities of practice and epistemology/ontology. As a third
culture kid (or global nomad), she has always been fascinated by cultures and
intercultural dynamics. She received her B.A. in Russian Language from
Wellesley College, her M.A. from Korea University in International Area Studies
and Language Testing, and Ph.D. in Communication from Arizona State University
(2012). Her dissertation was an ethnographic study on the transculturation
process of a Japanese martial art practice in the U.S.
4) Diana
Trebig (Saginaw Valley State University)
Diana Trebing
is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at Saginaw Valley
State University where she teaches courses in Intercultural Communication,
Identity and Culture, and Nonverbal Communication. Her research interests are
in intercultural communication, multicultural pedagogy, and identity
development within and across cultures
5) Shuo Yao
(Radford University)
Dr. Shuo Yao is an associate professor in the School
of Communication at Radford University. She earned her Master’s degree at
Peking University, China, in International Relations and then obtained her
doctoral degree at University of Maryland in Intercultural Communication. Her
teaching and research interests include communication theories, research
methods, persuasion, conflict management, and international and intercultural
communication. Currently she serves as the Graduate Program Coordinator at
Radford University and the Chair of the research committee at the Association
for Chinese Communication Studies (ACCS).
6) Qin Zhang
(Fairfield University)
Qin Zhang
(Ph.D., University of New Mexico, 2005) is an associate professor in the
Department of Communication at Fairfield University. Her research interests
span across intercultural, instructional, and interpersonal communication. She
has published over 40 articles in peer-reviewed journals, including Human Communication Research, Communication Education, Journal of
International and Intercultural Communication, Communication Quarterly, Western
Journal of Communication, Communication Research Reports, Journal of
Intercultural Communication Research, and International Journal of Intercultural Relations. She
serves on the editorial board of Communication
Education, Journal of Intercultural Communication Research, and Communication Teacher. She was the
2012-2013 President of the Association for Chinese Communication Scholars
affiliated with the NCA. She has been an IICD member since 2004 and she is very
excited to serve the division.
7) Lin Zhu
(University of Massachusetts at Boston)
Lin Zhu (Ph.D.,
University of Maryland) is an assistant professor of Communication at the
University of Massachusetts Boston. She has extensive research and teaching
experience in the U.S. and in China. She specializes in intercultural
communication and negotiation and conflict management. Her dissertation
research examined how mental models of sojourning students converge to the host
nationals’ mental models as a result of intercultural communication, and how
such convergence of mental models is related to sojourners’ psychological
health. In addition, she conducted cross-cultural tests on the influence of
negotiators’ emotions on their own and their partner’s behavior and outcomes.
She has taught a variety of communication courses, including intercultural
communication, interpersonal communication, research methods, and public
speaking. She is also actively involved in study abroad and other educational
exchange programs.
Unit Planner’s Report: IICD/NCA 2012
Amy Heuman, Vice Chair
Hello all! We have an exciting
IICD program for you during the NCA 100th Anniversary Convention. Please plan
to support the 33 program offerings that we have scheduled for our division as
well as additional programming sponsored through other caucuses &
divisions. We look forward to your attendance at the IICD Business Meeting on
Friday, 12:30pm-1:45pm, at the Palmer House Hilton (Crystal – 3rd Floor) and
our reception on Saturday, 6:30-8:00 pm, at the Palmer House Hilton (Location).
Our division program schedule and additional co-sponsored panels are as
follows:
International and Intercultural Communication Division Program
Thursday, November 20th
8:00am- 9:15am Drawing from Our
Past(s), Shaping Our Future(s): Developing a Working Definition of
Transnational Communication , Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
8:00 am -9:15 am The Impact of
the Global on Local Cultural Practice, Price Room - 5th Floor, Palmer House
Hilton
9:30 am -10:45 am Illuminating
Cultural Identity Negotiation Strategies in the 21st Century: From Identity
Negotiation Theory, to Communication Theory of Identity, to Co-Cultural Theory,
Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00 am -12:15 pm Challenging
and Resisting the Normative in Intercultural Communication Studies, Salon 7 -
3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00 am -12:15 pm Perpetuating
Racism Online and Countering Prejudice and Racism via Institutional Responses
and Celebrity Counter-Stereotypes, Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00 am -12:15 pm Uncanny
Presence/Absence: The figure of “Comfort Women” in Contemporary Japanese Public
Discourses, Room 4B - 4th Floor, Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with
Asian/Pacific Island Caucus, APAC Division, & GLBTQ Division
12:30 pm -1:45 pm Cultural
Adjustment, Acculturation, and Accommodation Experiences of International
Students and Expatriates, Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
2:00 pm -3:15 pm Media,
Technologies, and Cultural Practice in the Global Age, Crystal - 3rd Floor,
Palmer House Hilton
2:00 pm -3:15 pm Pedagogy of
Intersectionality Room 4J - 4th Floor, Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with
Asian/Pacific American Caucus, APAC Division, GLBTQ Division
2:00 pm -3:15 pm The Presence of
Foreign Experiences: (Re)locating Transnational Identity Performances Price
Room - 5th Floor, Palmer House Hilton, Co-Sponsored with Performance Studies
Division
3:30 pm -4:45 pm Intercultural
Dialogue: A Theoretical Rationale and Four Studies from Different Parts of Asia
Salon 12 - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
Friday, November 21st
8:00 am - 9:15 am 100 Years of
Postcoloniality: Intersections of Communication Studies, Postcolonial Theory,
Digital Humanities and Affective Labor , Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House
Hilton, Co-sponsored with Critical and Cultural Studies Division
8:00 am -9:15 am Popping Japan:
Media Reification and Identity Co-optation Room 4B - 4th Floor, Hilton Chicago,
Co-Sponsored with Asian/Pacific American Caucus, APAC Division
8:00 am -9:15 am Representing
Politics and Political Discord in International Contexts PDR 1 - 3rd Floor,
Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with Mass Communication Division & Political
Communication Division
9:30 am -10:45 am Subjectivity
and Agency: Exploring Sites of Resignation and Resistance Salon 7 - 3rd Floor,
Palmer House Hilton
9:30 am -10:45 am Top Four
Competitive Student Papers in International and Intercultural Communication
Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00 am- 12:15 pm Other/ed
Voices, Other/ed Spaces, and Cultural Be/Longing Price Room, 5th Floor, Palmer
House Hilton
11:00 am- 12:15 Top Four
Competitive Scholar Papers in International and Intercultural Communication
Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
12:30 pm- 1:45 pm International
and Intercultural Communication Division Business Meeting Crystal - 3rd Floor,
Palmer House Hilton
2:00 pm -3:15 pm The
International and Intercultural Communication Division: Past Challenges-Present
Victories Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
3:30 pm -4:45 pm A Culture of
Tough Jews: Rhetorical Regeneration and the Politics of Identity Crystal - 3rd
Floor, Palmer House Hilton
3:30 pm -4:45 pm Virtual
Cosmopolitanism and Intercultural New Media: (Re)Imagining Past
Cosmopolitanisms within Present Scholarship Salon 7 - 3rd Floor, Palmer House
Hilton
Saturday, November 22nd
8:00am - 9:15am Arguing Goals,
Cultural Communication Tendencies, and Communication Socialization Agents
Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
8:00am -9:15am Rearticulating
"Asian" and "Pacific" (American) Identities and Spaces Room
4B - 4th Floor, Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with Asian/Pacific American
Caucus, APAC Division
8:00am -9:15am The Presence of
Our Voices: Continuing the Project of Inclusion in International and
Intercultural Communication Research Price Room - 5th Floor, Palmer House
Hilton
9:30am -10:45am Global Politics,
Media, and Immigration Policy Salon 7 - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
9:30am -10:45am Ireland, France,
Brazil, China, India, and the U.S.: News Media Coverage and Framing of Crisis
Events Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00am -12:15pm College
Students, Classroom Contexts, and What the Communication Teacher Needs to Know
about Teaching in Globally Diverse Classrooms Salon 7 - 3rd Floor, Palmer House
Hilton
11:00am - 12:15pm
Non-Governmental Organizations in a Globalizing World: Communication Networks,
Culture, Opportunities and Challenges Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00am -12:15pm Scholar to
Scholar: Constructing a Communicative World Salon C - Lower Level, Hilton
Chicago, Co-Sponsored with Communication as Social Construction Division,
Environmental Communication Division, Peace and Conflict Communication
Division, & Scholar to Scholar
11:00am -12:15pm Who are we? Who
am I? Exploring Auto/Ethnography and Asian/American Experiences Room 4J - 4th
Floor, Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with Asian/Pacific American Caucus, APAC
Division, GLBTQ Division
12:30pm -1:45pm Negotiations of
(Im)migrant and Citizenship Struggles Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
2:00pm -3:15pm Diaspora and
Beyond: South Asian Perspectives on Identity, Community and Culture in
Transnational Landscapes Room 4B - 4th Floor, Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with
the Asian/Pacific American Caucus, APAC Division
2:00pm -3:15pm IICD Honors
Graduate Student Seminar, Part I Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton,
Co-Sponsored with the NCA First Vice President
3:30pm -4:45pm IICD Honors
Graduate Student Seminar, Part II Crystal - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton,
Co-Sponsored with the NCA First Vice President
3:30pm -4:45pm Theorizing
Cultural Identity and Negotiation in Asian/American Spaces Room 4B - 4th Floor,
Hilton Chicago, Co-Sponsored with the Asian/Pacific American Caucus, APAC
Division
Sunday, November 23rd
8:00am - 9:15am Articulation of
Intercultural Pedagogies: Our Past and Future Salon 12 - 3rd Floor, Palmer
House Hilton
8:00am -9:15am Communication for
Development and Social Change Salon 2 - 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
8:00am - 9:15am Globalizing
Intercultural Communication: Case Studies and Personal Narratives for the 21st
Century Price Room - 5th Floor, Palmer House Hilton
9:30am -10:45am Critical
Inter/Cultural and Feminist Critiques of Organized Social Change Movements
Salon 12 – 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton, Co-Sponsored with Feminist &
Women's Studies Division International, Women's Caucus
11:00am -12:15pm Social Media and
College Students of Color: Utilizing Technology for the Classroom, Careers and
Social Change Salon 12 – 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton
11:00am -12:15pm The Presence of
Queer Intercultural Studies: Emerging Gender/Sexuality/Cultural Performances in
Japan Salon 2 – 3rd Floor, Palmer House Hilton, Co-Sponsored with APAC Division
& Performance Studies Division
IICD NCA WINE RECEPTION
AND HONORS GRADUATE STUDENT SEMINAR SET FOR SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, PALMER HOUSE
HILTON, CRYSTAL ROOM
From
Bob Shuter, Arizona State University/Marquette University
Coordinator,
New Initiatives IICD
IICD NCA WINE RECEPTION SET FOR
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22!
Marriot, Delaware B
The NCA IICD Reception is set for Saturday, November 22,
6:30-8:00 PM, Palmer House Hilton, Crystal Room (third floor). This is a wine
reception provided with the compliments of our new partner, Sage Publications,
and our division! Attendance has been excellent the past three years – a
wonderful opportunity to socialize with IICD colleagues and enjoy complimentary
wine, beverages, and snacks. Awards will be presented to the 6 graduate student
finalists from the division’s Honors Graduate Student seminar! The Ralph Cooley
Award, the division’s highest honor, will also be presented at the reception.
Please plan to attend!!
Also, please attend the IICD very first Honors Graduate
Student Seminar on Saturday, November 22, 2-4:45PM, Palmer House Hilton,
Crystal Room (third floor). This event is also sponsored by IICD in conjunction
with our new partner, Sage Publications!
The seminar will feature the competitively selected research of six graduate
students who will be critiqued in an open session by seven top ICC scholars!
For more details, see the NCA convention program. The seminar is open to the
public
I look forward to seeing you at both events!
IICD OFFICERS 2014…
Executive Committee
Chair: Yoshitaka Miike (ymiike@hawaii.edu)
Vice Chair: Amy Heuman
(a.heuman@ttu.edu)
Vice Chair Elect: Sara DeTurk
(Sara.DeTurk@utsa.edu)
Secretary: Ahmet Atay
(aatay@wooster.edu)
Immediate Past Chair: S. Lily Mendoza
(mendoza@oakland.edu)
THE
IICD CONFERENCE GUIDE AND THE NEXT
NEWSLETTER. . .
We are trying something new this
year! Approximately 1 week before NCA,
you will receive an IICD Conference Guide from us (via email). This guide will have a reminder of the
different panels sponsored by IICD and the election slate, but it will also
have suggestions of area places to eat in Chicago. So print it out, or keep it
on your phone for quick reference during the conference! The next full edition
of the newsletter will arrive in December.
If you have any notices, announcements, or other information that should
go in the newsletter, please email your information to the Publications Chair: Jennifer Willis-Rivera at jennifer.willis-rivera@uwrf.edu.
See you in Chicago!!
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