Knowledge Communication
Contours of a Research Agenda
Peter Kastberg
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Peter Kastberg, Knowledge Communication (2019), Frank & Timme, Berlin, ISBN: 9783732995707
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Beschreibung / Abstract
Knowledge Communication as a research field emerges as a response to the communicative core challenges of the knowledge society. At ist center is the question of how to produce and transform specialized knowledge into interactions to gain value for this kind of knowledge. The field’s foundational concepts concern a transactional understanding of communication, an ideology of convergence between communicators and an appreciation of knowledge as construction. These stem from critical discussions of insights harvested from three parental disciplines: Language for Specific Purposes, Public Understanding of Science, and Knowledge Management. In their synthesis, these foundational concepts define Knowledge Communication as a means of strategic communication. In lieu of this, the research agenda of Knowledge Communication presents a novel prism through which to discern and investigate communicative core challenges of the knowledge society.
Beschreibung
Peter Kastberg is a full professor of organizational communication and the founding director of the research group Communicating Organizations at the Faculty of Humanities, Aalborg University, Denmark. He holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree in International Business Communication as well as a Ph.D. in Applied Linguistics/Technical Communication. Among his current research interests are the mediation of specialized knowledge across knowledge asymmetries, philosophy of communication, communication theory, and organizational socialization.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- BEGINN
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The Knowledge Society as a Framework
- 2 Three Disciplinary Roads to Knowledge Communication
- 3 Communicating (about) Knowledge
- 4. On the Proverbial †˜Other†™ in Knowledge Communication
- 5. Knowledge Asymmetries – as Seen from the Perspective of Knowledge Communication
- 6. Knowledge Communication as a 3rd-Order Disciplinarity
- References