ABSTRACT

Identity and Communication offers an innovative take on traditional topics of intercultural communication while promoting new ideas and progressive theories.With essays by emerging voices in identity communication, volume contributors discuss the ways that racial, cultural, and gender identities are perceived and relayed within those communities and the media. The text’s essays are structured into four parts, each highlighting different themes of identity communication, from general approaches to racial perceptions to female and adolescent identities. Originating from the University of Texas at Austin‘s New Agendas in Communication symposium, this volume represents some of the latest and most forward-looking scholarship currently available.

chapter |5 pages

chapter 1 Mass Media and Social Identity

New Research Agendas

chapter |19 pages

chapter 4 Same News, Different Narrative

How the Latina/o-Oriented Press Tells Stories of Social Identity

chapter Chapter 6|25 pages

Prehistory of a Stereotype

Mass Media Othering of Mexicans in the Era of Manifest Destiny

chapter |23 pages

chapter 8 Mass Media and African American Identities

Examining Black Self-Concept and Intersectionality

chapter |19 pages

chapter 9 Rebooting Identities

Using Computer-Mediated Communication to Cope with a Stigmatizing Social Identity