Description

Book Synopsis

An Ecology of Communication: Response and Responsibility in an Age of Ecocrisis moves readers beyond the anthropocentric bias of communication study and toward a listening-based model of communication; an essential move toward discerning fitting responses and the call to responsibility in an age of ecocrisis. This book addresses the ecological and communicative dilemma in which the universe, earth, and socio-cultural life world are resoundingly dialogic, all while we create modern and postmodern cultures largely governed by monologue. This book addresses the need to live different, non-dogmatic stories that vivify our links with the natural world, redefining dominant myths of unlimited growth, technology as savior, and linear progress. The ecological crisis, most broadly construed, is a crisis of communication. Scholars of communication, ecology, and social sciences will find this book particularly interesting.



Trade Review

“Homestead interacts with a wide range of thinkers and his own personal experience to articulate how ecocrisis can be understood as a fundamental crisis of communication. An Ecology of Communication comes at a moment when such cross-disciplinary revisits to the very glue that holds our shared meanings together are needed. It’s in understanding the ecological force of communication, and its intimate entwinement with the social, cultural, psychological, and sacred, that we remember how to listen to the wider world and know how to fittingly respond."

-- Tema Milstein, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

"It takes years of committed and thoughtful engagement with an idea to yield work as broad and fecund as this. Homestead achieves his eco-communicative ethics by reading a vast array of interlocutors with a generosity seldom seen when so much is at stake. This serves him well (and recommends the practice to all of us) as he learns deeply from a wide and multidisciplinary range of thinkers. That said, Homestead is never far from his ultimate concern and original contribution. If we stand a chance for a livable future on the other side of the climate crisis, then thinking such as is demonstrated in this fine book will have been central to keeping us alive to the struggle."

-- Ramsey Eric Ramsey, Arizona State University

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Introduction: Ecocrisis as a Crisis of Communication

Chapter One: The Fitting Response: Calvin O. Schrag and Rational Communication

Chapter Two: Integral Meta-Theory: Ken Wilber and Spiritual Communication

Chapter Three: To Learn but Not Return: Paul Shepard and Mythic-Animistic Communication

Chapter Four: The Pattern that Connects: Gregory Bateson and Aesthetic Communication

Chapter Five: Discerning the Unfit: New Age to Ascension

Chapter Six: Discerning the Unfit: Interspecies Communication

Chapter Seven: The Call to Responsibility: Thoreau and the Voice(s) of Nature

Epilogue: A Fitting Responsiveness: Communicating Our Way into the Future

An Ecology of Communication: Response and

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    A Hardback by William Homestead

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      View other formats and editions of An Ecology of Communication: Response and by William Homestead

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 20/04/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793618146, 978-1793618146
      ISBN10: 1793618143

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      An Ecology of Communication: Response and Responsibility in an Age of Ecocrisis moves readers beyond the anthropocentric bias of communication study and toward a listening-based model of communication; an essential move toward discerning fitting responses and the call to responsibility in an age of ecocrisis. This book addresses the ecological and communicative dilemma in which the universe, earth, and socio-cultural life world are resoundingly dialogic, all while we create modern and postmodern cultures largely governed by monologue. This book addresses the need to live different, non-dogmatic stories that vivify our links with the natural world, redefining dominant myths of unlimited growth, technology as savior, and linear progress. The ecological crisis, most broadly construed, is a crisis of communication. Scholars of communication, ecology, and social sciences will find this book particularly interesting.



      Trade Review

      “Homestead interacts with a wide range of thinkers and his own personal experience to articulate how ecocrisis can be understood as a fundamental crisis of communication. An Ecology of Communication comes at a moment when such cross-disciplinary revisits to the very glue that holds our shared meanings together are needed. It’s in understanding the ecological force of communication, and its intimate entwinement with the social, cultural, psychological, and sacred, that we remember how to listen to the wider world and know how to fittingly respond."

      -- Tema Milstein, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

      "It takes years of committed and thoughtful engagement with an idea to yield work as broad and fecund as this. Homestead achieves his eco-communicative ethics by reading a vast array of interlocutors with a generosity seldom seen when so much is at stake. This serves him well (and recommends the practice to all of us) as he learns deeply from a wide and multidisciplinary range of thinkers. That said, Homestead is never far from his ultimate concern and original contribution. If we stand a chance for a livable future on the other side of the climate crisis, then thinking such as is demonstrated in this fine book will have been central to keeping us alive to the struggle."

      -- Ramsey Eric Ramsey, Arizona State University

      Table of Contents

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: Ecocrisis as a Crisis of Communication

      Chapter One: The Fitting Response: Calvin O. Schrag and Rational Communication

      Chapter Two: Integral Meta-Theory: Ken Wilber and Spiritual Communication

      Chapter Three: To Learn but Not Return: Paul Shepard and Mythic-Animistic Communication

      Chapter Four: The Pattern that Connects: Gregory Bateson and Aesthetic Communication

      Chapter Five: Discerning the Unfit: New Age to Ascension

      Chapter Six: Discerning the Unfit: Interspecies Communication

      Chapter Seven: The Call to Responsibility: Thoreau and the Voice(s) of Nature

      Epilogue: A Fitting Responsiveness: Communicating Our Way into the Future

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