'COMM Plishments November 2016
News about Communication Faculty, Graduate and Undergrad Student and Staff Doings
David Boromisza-Habashi, Associate Professor, was elected Vice-Chair of the Language and Social Interaction Division at ICA, a position that morphs into division chair in the years ahead. In addition, he has two papers that were just published: (1) 鈥淲hat we need is good communication: Vernacular globalization in some Hungarian speech鈥 in the International Journal of Communication, 10, 4600-4619; and (2) with coauthor G. P谩l, 鈥淭he discourse of dictatorship in Central Eastern Europe and the case of Hungarian 鈥榟ate speech鈥欌 in D. Carbaugh (Ed.), The handbook of communication in cross-cultural perspective (pp. 287-298). New York, NY: Routledge.
Robert Craig, Professor Emeritus, just published 鈥淓l metamodelo constitutivo: una revisi贸n a diecis茅is a帽os鈥 (C. Vidales, trans.) in C. E. Vidales Gonz谩les & E. Vizer (coords.), Comunicaci贸n, campo(s), teor铆as y problemas. Una perspectiva internacional (pp. 307-336). Seville, Spain: Comunicaci贸n Social Ediciones y Publicaciones.
Tiara Na鈥檖uti, Assistant Professor, has published: 鈥淔rom Gu氓han and Back: Navigating a 鈥楤oth/Neither鈥 Analytic for Rhetorical Field Methods,鈥 in Sara L. McKinnon, Robert Asen, Karma R. Ch谩vez, and Robert Glenn Howard, Eds., Text + Field: Innovations in Rhetorical Method. Penn State University Press, 2016, pp. 56-71. And, her article, "Pacific Moves Beyond Colonialism: A Conversation from Hawai鈥檌 and Gu氓han" has been accepted for publication by Feminist Studies. Additionally, as a BoulderTalks Executive Committee Member she facilitated a workshop on 鈥淭he New Green Economy鈥 at the RISE Latino Business Conference in Longmont, baby直播app on Oct. 14, 2016.
Leah Sprain, Assistant Professor, had two articles accepted. The first article, co-authored with past MA graduate student Sonia Ivancic is titled 鈥淐ommunicating openness in deliberation鈥 and it will be appearing in Communication Monographs; the second article, 鈥淧aradoxes of public participation in climate change governance鈥 is to appear in The Good Society. As a BoulderTalks Executive Committee member she, along with several other members of the field, received a grant from NCA to support a summer symposium to develop a research agenda around energy democracy.
At the National Communication Association conference in Philadelphia this November the following graduate students will be presenting papers.
Harry Archer, 鈥淯sing Google Maps to Teach Geosemiotics, Indexicality, and the Contestability of Public Spaces.鈥
Rebecca Avalos, is a panelist on 鈥淐onstruyendo Puentes/Building Bridges: Communicating Environmental Justice and Latinx Community Engagement,鈥 a panelist on 鈥淲orking Through Anti-racist Pedagogy and Praxis to Critique Notions of Civility as Junior Educators of Color,鈥 and 鈥淩ace and Revolution from Democracy to Donald: An Intellectual History of the Cultural Formations of (In)Civility.鈥
Nathan Bedsole, with Jennfier Malkowski, 鈥淚nertia, Invention, and Reclaimed Architecture: From Factory Production to Bioengineering.鈥
Patrick Bujold, MA student, 鈥淐reating the Social Pariah through Social Movement: Fossil Fuel Divestment in the Case of Divest Harvard.鈥
Sarah Chorley, 鈥淢ental Illness in Organizational Communication Research: Utilizing Feminist Standpoint Theory,鈥 and 鈥淯sing Exposure Therapy to Manage Public Speaking Anxiety.鈥
T. Jake Dionne and Joe Hatfield, 鈥淥bjectivity鈥檚 Rhetorical Effects,鈥 and 鈥淎ll Eyes on Me鈥: Subverting Memories of Madness through Residency Shows.鈥
T. Jake Dione is presenting 鈥淪pecters of James Byrd, Jr: A Racial Haunting in Obama鈥檚 Remarks on Hate Crimes Legislation鈥 and 鈥淐reatures in the Classroom: Including Internatural Communication in our Textbooks.鈥
Elizabeth Eger, 鈥淎n Uncertain 鈥楥loset鈥 for Transgender Job Seekers,鈥 andwith Amy K. Way, 鈥淩eimagining Qualitative Data Analysis and Writing in Organizational Communication via a Comparative Constructed Focus Group Method.鈥
Blake Hallinan, 鈥淟ikes and Dislikes: The Lazarsfeld-Stanton Program Analyzer and the Theory of Media Affects.鈥
Stephanie Hartzell is presenting 鈥淩easonably Racist: Locating Discourses of White Superiority along an (Un)Reasonable Spectrum鈥 and 鈥淧ut Your Theory Where Your Mouth Is: Considering Non-Human Animals from Post-Humanist and New-Materialist Perspectives.鈥
Joe Hatfield is presenting 鈥淭emporal Residues in the Backward Archive,鈥 and 鈥淪taging Southern Diaspora: Alvin Ailey鈥檚 Blood and the Backward Temporality of Quare Memorialization.鈥
Danielle Hodge, 鈥淜anye West鈥檚 Yeezus and the College Dropout: Exploring Intertextuality and Identity through Sampling.鈥
Jared Kopczynski, with Natalie Nelson-Marsh, 鈥溾橪ights Must Stay On鈥: The Communicative Roles of Boundary Spanning,鈥 and with Matt Koschmann, Associate Professor, 鈥淧racticing Authority in Disaster Relief Coordination.鈥
Katherine Peters, 鈥淥rganizing Lives: Organizational Subjectivity,鈥 and 鈥溾橳hey were Just Anti-Information鈥: The Problem of Partner Selection for Collaboration.鈥
Lydia Reinig with David Boromisza-Habashi, Associate Professor, 鈥淢aking Fear My Bitch: Students鈥 Narratives of Self-Transformation in the Public Speaking Course.鈥
Rebecca Rice, 鈥淲hen Collaborations Don鈥檛 Collaborate: High Reliability Organizational Networks and the Collaborative Continuum.鈥