FREE SHIPPING BOTH WAYS
ON EVERY ORDER!
LIST PRICE:
$74.61

OUR PRICE:
$25.85

You may extend rentals at any time.


Our Voices : Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication

ISBN: 9780199737215 | 0199737215
Edition: 5th
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Pub. Date: 2/25/2011

Why Rent from Knetbooks?

Because Knetbooks knows college students. Our rental program is designed to save you time and money. Whether you need a textbook for a semester, quarter or even a summer session, we have an option for you. Simply select a rental period, enter your information and your book will be on its way!

Top 5 reasons to order all your textbooks from Knetbooks:

  • We have the lowest prices on thousands of popular textbooks
  • Free shipping both ways on ALL orders
  • Most orders ship within 48 hours
  • Need your book longer than expected? Extending your rental is simple
  • Our customer support team is always here to help
SummaryTable of Contents

Our Voices: Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication examines intercultural communication through an array of cultural and personal perspectives, with each of its contributors writing a first person account of his or her experiences in the real world. While most readers are collections of scholarly essays that describe intercultural communication, Our Voices presents short, student-oriented readings chosen with an eye toward engaging the reader. Collectively, the readings tackle the key areas of communication rhetoric, mass com... MORE

NEW TO THIS EDITION:

-New essays on the Obama presidency, Osage naming rituals, Muslim feminist perspectives, South Asian Indian women in the workplace, class identity, and the Haitian tragedy in a global context

-Expanded treatment of Arab Americans and the Muslim world

-Reworked coverage of 9/11 to accommodate our most current understanding and scholarship

Empowering and educating students in equal measure, Our Voices is an ideal reader for any intercultural communication course.

"One of the strengths of this book is that it doesn't look at intercultural communication phenomena as 'objectively given', but rather as 'subjectively problematic' by integrating communication theory yet allowing persons to speak in their true cultural voices. If the idea is to create cultural understanding in a way that students from various groups will not tune out from the beginning, certainly the editors of this book took on a daunting task."-C. Thomas Preston, Gainesville State College

"I very much like the approach of this text. The attention to the voices of historically marginalized authors and the use of personal voice, rather than other approaches that have historically Other and silenced us, are important in understanding the goals of this book."-Bernadette Calafell, Syracuse University

"If I can put it this way the realness of this text is its most distinctive feature. In it we read about the struggles, the successes, the challenges, the learning experiences, the joys, and the spiritual uplift and rejuvenation of the authors. We have academic language combined with cultural languages. All of it comes together succinctly to make crucial points regarding our identity. The articles are not too long, either, which is a joy to students, but they provide enough material to get students thinking critically about issues they've either encountered or not."-Patreece Boone, St. Louis University



Our Voices is a distinctive reader for the intercultural communication course, featuring the actual voices of contributors writing from their own particular cultural setting. While most readers are collections of scholarly essays that describe intercultural communication, Our Voices presents short, student-oriented readings that are first person narratives chosen with an eye toward engaging the reader.

* = New to this edition
Acknowledgments
Introduction, Alberto González, Marsha Houston, and Victoria Chen
Part I: Naming Ourselves
*1. Imagining Identity within Community: Musings on Tripmaster Monkey, Victoria Chen
*2. The Obama Presidency and the (Re)Framing of African American Identity, Marcus Coleman
3. Dis/orienting Identities: Asian Americans, History, and Intercultural Communication, Thomas Nakayama
*4. Osage Naming Ritual as a Form of Cultural Identity, Steven B. Pratt, Merry C. Pratt... MORE

Related Products


  • Our Voices : Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication
    Our Voices : Essays in Culture...
  • Our Voices : Essays in Culture, Ethnicity, and Communication (Fourth Edition)
    Our Voices : Essays in Culture...


Please wait while this item is added to your cart...