Abstract From 1939 to 1940, the Rockefeller Foundation promoted in the Rockefeller Foundation Communication Seminar, in the United States, which brought together researchers once a month to discuss the direction of studies on communication. In the outbreaks of World War II, the seminar turned out to be a milestone in the history of the field of communication. This article seeks to examine a barely visible consequence of Rockefeller Seminar: the gradual replacement of the word propaganda in the media studies in the United States, substituted by the term communication. We conclude that the activities of the seminar were decisive for the change in terminology, which, in turn, had an epistemological impact in the field.</p
Being an interdisciplinary science, communication ows its key concepts and theoreties to other scien...
Changing technology has changed our way of perceiving life, our ways of doing business, our life-sty...
This chapter argues that the concerns of propaganda, voice, and democracy that characterized the ris...
What does it mean to communicate and how “best” can this action be accomplished? Perhaps the second...
What does it mean to communicate and how “best” can this action be accomplished? Perhaps the second ...
The disciplinary status of communication study (academic communication) has remained a point of cont...
This study examines the development of mass communications research as an area of study at United St...
International audienceBuilding on recent works emphasizing the “post-disciplinary” status of communi...
From persuasion to manipulation and seduc-tion. (A very short history of global communication) This ...
This report presents a family tree of theories, concepts, methodologies and strategies for change in...
THE DEVELOPMENTS in organizational communication which were reported in the literature during the pe...
The article explores how strategic communication successfully established itself as an academic disc...
In this chapter, initially we will focus on what communication originally meant across academia. Bui...
The article explores how strategic communication successfully established itself as an academic disc...
John Curtin and Franklin D. Roosevelt developed a radio ethos to convey public appearances of transp...
Being an interdisciplinary science, communication ows its key concepts and theoreties to other scien...
Changing technology has changed our way of perceiving life, our ways of doing business, our life-sty...
This chapter argues that the concerns of propaganda, voice, and democracy that characterized the ris...
What does it mean to communicate and how “best” can this action be accomplished? Perhaps the second...
What does it mean to communicate and how “best” can this action be accomplished? Perhaps the second ...
The disciplinary status of communication study (academic communication) has remained a point of cont...
This study examines the development of mass communications research as an area of study at United St...
International audienceBuilding on recent works emphasizing the “post-disciplinary” status of communi...
From persuasion to manipulation and seduc-tion. (A very short history of global communication) This ...
This report presents a family tree of theories, concepts, methodologies and strategies for change in...
THE DEVELOPMENTS in organizational communication which were reported in the literature during the pe...
The article explores how strategic communication successfully established itself as an academic disc...
In this chapter, initially we will focus on what communication originally meant across academia. Bui...
The article explores how strategic communication successfully established itself as an academic disc...
John Curtin and Franklin D. Roosevelt developed a radio ethos to convey public appearances of transp...
Being an interdisciplinary science, communication ows its key concepts and theoreties to other scien...
Changing technology has changed our way of perceiving life, our ways of doing business, our life-sty...
This chapter argues that the concerns of propaganda, voice, and democracy that characterized the ris...