Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression
This essay explains pedagogical experiment at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock using a piece of literature as a case study to examine interpersonal-communication concepts and to emphasize a course theme of objectification of other human beings. The course, entitled Rhetoric and Communicatio...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1515/jped-2016-0013 |
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doaj-73617590e6274eceac07892fc2933f252021-09-06T19:40:53ZengSciendoPedagogický Časopis1338-21442016-12-01729711510.1515/jped-2016-0013jped-2016-0013Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppressionThompson Carol0Kleine Michael1University of Arkansas at Little Rock Department of Communication 2801 S. University Avenue Little Rock AR 72204, United States of AmericaUniversity of Arkansas at Little Rock Department of Rhetoric and Writing 2801 S. University Avenue Little Rock AR 72204, United States of AmericaThis essay explains pedagogical experiment at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock using a piece of literature as a case study to examine interpersonal-communication concepts and to emphasize a course theme of objectification of other human beings. The course, entitled Rhetoric and Communication, has two co-instructors. One instructor is from Rhetoric and Writing, the other is from Communication. This essay reviews the course they teach, along with the readings they require, and it selects The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, to illustrate how interpersonal themes play out in a literary text and how objectification thwarts deeply personal values. Initially, the essay summarizes key interpersonal concepts (schema theory, coordinated management of meaning, the work of Martin Buber, and Knapp’s work on relationship stages). It then considers students’ work as they produce a “filtered” summary, a summary that endeavors to apply the interpersonal concepts being studied to Kafka’s work. Finally, it explains how summaries work, the “passage hunt” exercise, and how text-based class discussions can lead to lively discussion, robust student writing and a richer understanding of interpersonal concepts as well as the part objectification plays in damaging relationships. Thus, the paper illustrates several pedagogical strategies as it explores how The Metamorphosis becomes a literary case study that answers the question: how did this fictional family create communication that resulted in such communicative tragedy?https://doi.org/10.1515/jped-2016-0013communicationpedagogyliteratureobjectificationinterpersonal communicationcase study |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Thompson Carol Kleine Michael |
spellingShingle |
Thompson Carol Kleine Michael Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression Pedagogický Časopis communication pedagogy literature objectification interpersonal communication case study |
author_facet |
Thompson Carol Kleine Michael |
author_sort |
Thompson Carol |
title |
Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression |
title_short |
Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression |
title_full |
Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression |
title_fullStr |
Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression |
title_full_unstemmed |
Using literature to explore interpersonal theory: Representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression |
title_sort |
using literature to explore interpersonal theory: representation of rhetorical objectification and oppression |
publisher |
Sciendo |
series |
Pedagogický Časopis |
issn |
1338-2144 |
publishDate |
2016-12-01 |
description |
This essay explains pedagogical experiment at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock using a piece of literature as a case study to examine interpersonal-communication concepts and to emphasize a course theme of objectification of other human beings. The course, entitled Rhetoric and Communication, has two co-instructors. One instructor is from Rhetoric and Writing, the other is from Communication. This essay reviews the course they teach, along with the readings they require, and it selects The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, to illustrate how interpersonal themes play out in a literary text and how objectification thwarts deeply personal values. Initially, the essay summarizes key interpersonal concepts (schema theory, coordinated management of meaning, the work of Martin Buber, and Knapp’s work on relationship stages). It then considers students’ work as they produce a “filtered” summary, a summary that endeavors to apply the interpersonal concepts being studied to Kafka’s work. Finally, it explains how summaries work, the “passage hunt” exercise, and how text-based class discussions can lead to lively discussion, robust student writing and a richer understanding of interpersonal concepts as well as the part objectification plays in damaging relationships. Thus, the paper illustrates several pedagogical strategies as it explores how The Metamorphosis becomes a literary case study that answers the question: how did this fictional family create communication that resulted in such communicative tragedy? |
topic |
communication pedagogy literature objectification interpersonal communication case study |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1515/jped-2016-0013 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT thompsoncarol usingliteraturetoexploreinterpersonaltheoryrepresentationofrhetoricalobjectificationandoppression AT kleinemichael usingliteraturetoexploreinterpersonaltheoryrepresentationofrhetoricalobjectificationandoppression |
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1717767585789902848 |