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Back Matter

Back Matter COMMUNICATION AND COMMUNITY: AN INTRODUCTION ommunities are composed of connected individuals. The communication that exists within these communities, about these communities, and between these communities is at the heart of this volume of Communication Yearbook. The chapters in this volume draw from the broad range encompassed by the communication discipline to review literature that has something to say about community and what the communication discipline has to contribute to understanding this human connection. This volume opens with Carl and Duck presenting an influence model addressing the most basic level of community, the personal relationship. This is followed by Stafford’s review of the literature on romantic and parent-child relationships at a distance. This review considers the alienating nature of community for those trying to keep connection with distant loved ones. From loved ones living apart to alternative organizational communities, Edley, Hylmö, and Newsom address community in terms of those working at home and telecommuting, running home-based businesses, and participating in online communities. Collectivist organizing and telework take on intriguing implications as one considers the community connection and lack of connection for those working at distance from others. Tracy and Dimock take us to the social milieu of the meeting in http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Annals of the International Communication Association Taylor & Francis

Back Matter

Annals of the International Communication Association , Volume 29 (1): 1 – Jan 1, 2005
2 pages

Back Matter

Abstract

COMMUNICATION AND COMMUNITY: AN INTRODUCTION ommunities are composed of connected individuals. The communication that exists within these communities, about these communities, and between these communities is at the heart of this volume of Communication Yearbook. The chapters in this volume draw from the broad range encompassed by the communication discipline to review literature that has something to say about community and what the communication discipline has to contribute to understanding...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2005 Taylor and Francis Group LLC
ISSN
2380-8977
eISSN
2380-8985
DOI
10.1080/23808985.2005.11679243
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

COMMUNICATION AND COMMUNITY: AN INTRODUCTION ommunities are composed of connected individuals. The communication that exists within these communities, about these communities, and between these communities is at the heart of this volume of Communication Yearbook. The chapters in this volume draw from the broad range encompassed by the communication discipline to review literature that has something to say about community and what the communication discipline has to contribute to understanding this human connection. This volume opens with Carl and Duck presenting an influence model addressing the most basic level of community, the personal relationship. This is followed by Stafford’s review of the literature on romantic and parent-child relationships at a distance. This review considers the alienating nature of community for those trying to keep connection with distant loved ones. From loved ones living apart to alternative organizational communities, Edley, Hylmö, and Newsom address community in terms of those working at home and telecommuting, running home-based businesses, and participating in online communities. Collectivist organizing and telework take on intriguing implications as one considers the community connection and lack of connection for those working at distance from others. Tracy and Dimock take us to the social milieu of the meeting in

Journal

Annals of the International Communication AssociationTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2005

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