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Communication is war by other means: a new perspective on war and communication in the thought of twentieth century selected communication scholars

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dc.contributor.advisor Goosen, D. P. (Daniel Petrus), 1953-
dc.contributor.advisor Du Plessis, Daniël Frederik, 1959-
dc.contributor.author Sonderling, Stefan
dc.date.accessioned 2013-09-04T06:51:41Z
dc.date.available 2013-09-04T06:51:41Z
dc.date.issued 2012-11
dc.identifier.citation Sonderling, Stefan Prof. (2012) Communication is war by other means: a new perspective on war and communication in the thought of twentieth century selected communication scholars, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10446> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10446
dc.description.abstract The September 11, 2001 Jihadists attack on the West and the subsequent wars on terrorism indicate that war may be a permanent condition of life in the contemporary world. This implies that to understand contemporary society, culture and communication requires an understanding of war because war could perhaps provide a perspective through which to understand the world. The aim of this study is to provide such a perspective and to critically explore the link between war and communication. However, in approaching a study of war one is confronted with a pervasive pacifist anti-war ideological bias. To overcome the bias the study adopts a critical strategy: firstly it deconstructs the taken for granted assumptions about the positive value of peace and then it reconstructs and traces the contours of a Western tradition of philosophical thought that considers war as being an integral and formative aspect of human identity and communication. Chapter 2 uncovers the limitations of the pacifists' discourse on war. Chapter 3 traces the Western tradition originating in Heraclitus that considers war as formative experience of being human. Chapter 4 traces war and killing as formative of language and communication. Using these insights a careful reading and interpretation of how war informs the thought and functions in the texts of selected social theorists of the twentieth century. Chapter 5 traces war as an agonistic structure in the works of Johan Huizinga on the role of play and in the political theory of Carl Schmitt. Chapter 6 explores the idea of war as a model of society in the works of Foucault. Chapter 7 investigates the central influence of real and imagined war on Marshall McLuhan’s theory of the media. Chapter 8 explores the way war structures the thought of Lyotard on the postmodern condition. Chapter 9 concludes by drawing implications on how a perspective on war contributes to development of communication theory and understanding life in the postmodern condition.
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (viii, 353 leaves) en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject War en
dc.subject Battle en
dc.subject Agonistic en
dc.subject Killing en
dc.subject Death en
dc.subject Play en
dc.subject Peace discourse en
dc.subject Huizinga en
dc.subject Schmitt en
dc.subject Foucault en
dc.subject McLuhan en
dc.subject Lyotard en
dc.subject.ddc 320.0140904
dc.subject.lcsh Communication in politics -- 20th century en
dc.subject.lcsh Political science -- Communication -- 20th century en
dc.subject.lcsh War -- Communication -- 20th century en
dc.subject.lcsh Scholars -- Communication -- 20th century en
dc.subject.lcsh Communication -- 20th century en
dc.title Communication is war by other means: a new perspective on war and communication in the thought of twentieth century selected communication scholars en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Communication Science en
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil. (Communication)


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