ABSTRACT

Building on their past work in race and family communication, Rhunette C. Diggs and Thomas J. Socha gather in this volume contemporary theory and research concerning ways that families use communication to transform inherited cultural legacies for the better (Communication 3.0).

The book expands the field of communication’s understanding of the life-long impact that family communication has on the managing diverse and clashing cultural relationships, identities, meanings, and communication practices. It spotlights the economically disenfranchised alongside the economically secure, the systematically oppressed next to beneficiaries of Whiteness, and those actually or metaphorically killed and or threatened by violence and hateful systems outside of home. Together, the contributions address omissions of diverse family contexts in family communication research and reconsider qualitative and quantitative approaches that bring respect and equality to the participant-researcher relationship.

This book is suitable as a supplementary text for courses in family communication, family studies, race and ethnicity in communication, and intergroup communication.

chapter 1|18 pages

A Better Way

Family Communication 3.0

chapter 3|21 pages

Unsettling Narrative Inheritance in Multicultural Family

Race, Class, and Wealth in Family Stories of Property

chapter 4|20 pages

Qanon's Ideology of Hate

As a Catalyst for Negative Transformation in Families and Close Relationships

chapter 5|18 pages

Guess Who Came to Dinner (and Stayed)

Multiracial Romance and Families in Public and Private Spheres

chapter 6|15 pages

Resilience, Transitions, and Migration

Family Communication toward a More Hopeful Future

chapter 7|15 pages

Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma

Understanding Family Histories and Narratives

chapter 8|20 pages

Unexpected Financial Crises

Family Communication, Financial Planning, Ethnic/Racial Financial Practices, and Transformative Financial Security

chapter 9|25 pages

Breaking Free

Black, White, Biracial Women Respond to Memories of Family Race Legacies and Pass on Anti-Racism and Self-Family Care

chapter 10|15 pages

Healing from Trauma

Analyzing Letters When a Loved One Is Incarcerated

chapter 11|13 pages

A Brief Report

A Black Woman's Life Shines the Light on Black Males and Family Communication

chapter 12|24 pages

Family Communication 3.0

Smartphones, Transformation, and Families in the US and China