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Mainstream public relations overvalues noise, sound and voice in public communication. But how can we explain that while practitioners use silence on a daily basis, academics have widely remained quiet on the subject? Why is silence habitually famed as inherently bad and unethical?
Using a format of multiple short chapters and practice examples, this is the first book that discusses the concept of strategic silence, and its consequences for PR theory and practice. Applying silence to communication cases and issues in global societies, it will be of interest to scholars and researchers in…mehr
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Using a format of multiple short chapters and practice examples, this is the first book that discusses the concept of strategic silence, and its consequences for PR theory and practice. Applying silence to communication cases and issues in global societies, it will be of interest to scholars and researchers in public relations, strategic communications and communication studies.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 258
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. September 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317329299
- Artikelnr.: 49272277
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 258
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. September 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317329299
- Artikelnr.: 49272277
Foreword
Acknowledgments
I INTRODUCTION
II WHY IS PR SILENT ABOUT SILENCE?
1. The Western bias against silence
1. Logocentrism in the European tradition
2. Binomial separation of silence
3. Problematizing and naturalizing
4. Socialized in public relations
5. How do we measure silence?
2. Silence does not sell
1. Seller's market of PR labour, byer's market of PR product
2. Silence does not violate the senses
3. Silence does not click-bite
3. Silent symbiosis
1. Getting attention or directing attention?
2. The dominance of journalism silences over PR silences
3. Core and periphery
4. The message is the story
5. The messenger is the story
6. The media is the story
III STRATEGY AND SILENCE: MICHEL FOUCAULT, JEAN BAUDRILLARD, PIERRE
BOURDIEU, STUART HALL, NORMAN FAIRCLOUGH AND JÜRGEN HABERMAS
4. Strategy as discursive practice
1. Discursive practice
2. Strategy in silence, silence in strategy
3. Silence and secret
4. Strategy and practice
5. Instrumental and communicative action
1. Action and practice
2. Serious and authentic
3. Practical mastery
4. Instrumentality and finality
IV INDIRECT COMMUNICATION
6. Silence and invisibility
1. The sayable and the seeable
2. Presence and absence
3. Image and representation
4. Mediated invisibility and power
7. Communication and silence
1. Silencing communication
2. Communicative silence
3. Structural silence
4. Double articulation
8. The ladder of indirect communication
1. Strategy and silence
2. Communication and non-communication
3. Public and private communication
4. Discursive and non-discursive
5. Direct and indirect discourse
6. Explicit and implicit
9. Indirect discourse
1. Speech acts
2. Silence as indirect discourse
10. Explicit and implicit silence
1. Explicit silence
2. Implicit silence
3. Framing the mix
V STRATEGIC SILENCES
11. Strategic silences: A definition
1. Intentional, directed at audiences
2. Communicative
3. Discursive
4. In situation of communication
5. Degrees of indirectness
6. Actionable listening
12. Content provision
1. Stealth marketing
2. PR - from wholesaler to retailer?
3. Consumer advocacy
4. Content creation and relationships building
13. Silence as negation
1. Apophatic silence
2. Silence discourses
3. Small voice and small target
4. The spell of uncompromised reality
5. The apophatic turn
14. Complicit silence
1. Weapons of the weak
2. Embarrassment as strategy
15. Silence as disengagement
1. Non-engagement and disengagement
2. Engagement and resistance
3. Disengagement as explicit silence
4. Presuppositions in implicit silence
5. Frame as omission
16. Strategic ambiguity
1. Iconicity and ambiguity
2. Polyvalence and openness
3. Retail or grand design communication?
4. Ambiguation and disambiguation
17. Silence as attention diversion
1. Taking out the trash
2. Firebraking
3. Stoking the fire
18. Off the record communication
1. On and off the record
2. No comment and off the record
3. Trust and affinity
4. Off the record has rules
VI SILENCE BEYOND STRATEGY
19. Silence as system
1. System and strategy
2. Theme and opinion
3. The art of being boring
20. Silence as skillset
1. The credibility to say No
2. Sweat equity
3. Noise curation
4. Attribution and accreditation
VII CONCLUSIONS
References
Personal interviews
Index
Foreword
Acknowledgments
I INTRODUCTION
II WHY IS PR SILENT ABOUT SILENCE?
1. The Western bias against silence
1. Logocentrism in the European tradition
2. Binomial separation of silence
3. Problematizing and naturalizing
4. Socialized in public relations
5. How do we measure silence?
2. Silence does not sell
1. Seller's market of PR labour, byer's market of PR product
2. Silence does not violate the senses
3. Silence does not click-bite
3. Silent symbiosis
1. Getting attention or directing attention?
2. The dominance of journalism silences over PR silences
3. Core and periphery
4. The message is the story
5. The messenger is the story
6. The media is the story
III STRATEGY AND SILENCE: MICHEL FOUCAULT, JEAN BAUDRILLARD, PIERRE
BOURDIEU, STUART HALL, NORMAN FAIRCLOUGH AND JÜRGEN HABERMAS
4. Strategy as discursive practice
1. Discursive practice
2. Strategy in silence, silence in strategy
3. Silence and secret
4. Strategy and practice
5. Instrumental and communicative action
1. Action and practice
2. Serious and authentic
3. Practical mastery
4. Instrumentality and finality
IV INDIRECT COMMUNICATION
6. Silence and invisibility
1. The sayable and the seeable
2. Presence and absence
3. Image and representation
4. Mediated invisibility and power
7. Communication and silence
1. Silencing communication
2. Communicative silence
3. Structural silence
4. Double articulation
8. The ladder of indirect communication
1. Strategy and silence
2. Communication and non-communication
3. Public and private communication
4. Discursive and non-discursive
5. Direct and indirect discourse
6. Explicit and implicit
9. Indirect discourse
1. Speech acts
2. Silence as indirect discourse
10. Explicit and implicit silence
1. Explicit silence
2. Implicit silence
3. Framing the mix
V STRATEGIC SILENCES
11. Strategic silences: A definition
1. Intentional, directed at audiences
2. Communicative
3. Discursive
4. In situation of communication
5. Degrees of indirectness
6. Actionable listening
12. Content provision
1. Stealth marketing
2. PR - from wholesaler to retailer?
3. Consumer advocacy
4. Content creation and relationships building
13. Silence as negation
1. Apophatic silence
2. Silence discourses
3. Small voice and small target
4. The spell of uncompromised reality
5. The apophatic turn
14. Complicit silence
1. Weapons of the weak
2. Embarrassment as strategy
15. Silence as disengagement
1. Non-engagement and disengagement
2. Engagement and resistance
3. Disengagement as explicit silence
4. Presuppositions in implicit silence
5. Frame as omission
16. Strategic ambiguity
1. Iconicity and ambiguity
2. Polyvalence and openness
3. Retail or grand design communication?
4. Ambiguation and disambiguation
17. Silence as attention diversion
1. Taking out the trash
2. Firebraking
3. Stoking the fire
18. Off the record communication
1. On and off the record
2. No comment and off the record
3. Trust and affinity
4. Off the record has rules
VI SILENCE BEYOND STRATEGY
19. Silence as system
1. System and strategy
2. Theme and opinion
3. The art of being boring
20. Silence as skillset
1. The credibility to say No
2. Sweat equity
3. Noise curation
4. Attribution and accreditation
VII CONCLUSIONS
References
Personal interviews
Index