
Now in a new edition, Interplay: The Process of Interpersonal Communication provides a comprehensive and engaging introduction to communication in interpersonal relationships. Based on an extensive body of scholarship, interplay cites more than 1,000 sources--30% of which are new to the ninth edition--and provides a variety of thought-provoking photos, sidebars, and cartoons that illustrate key points in the text and connect them to everyday life and popular culture.The ninth edition is updated and revised throughout to help make material more clear and useful to students. It provides new information on how people manage their identities on the Internet, how people interpret language in everyday situations, reasons for defensiveness, the role of physical appearance in relational communication, and how technology and gender affect different types of interaction. In addition, the text expands coverage of emotional expression, and extends its balance treatment of gender influences, self-disclosure, and methods of managing privacy in personal relationships.FEATURES OF THE NINTH EDITIONBLNew-Part IV: Contexts of Interpersonal Communication focuses on some of the most important circumstances that surround human interaction. Dedicated chapters focus on culture (Chapter 12), and work and family (all-new Chapter 13). Each chapter provides context-specific guidelines for communicating effectively.BLNew-Self-Assessment Instruments in each chapter allow students to analyze their current communication behavior and its consequences. The behaviors discussed include listening styles, expressing emotions, self-disclosure, and ways to handle aggression.BLUpdated-Film Clips at the end of each chapter profile recent feature films-including About a Boy (intimacy and self-disclosure), Ghost World (defensiveness), and Life as a House (the role of touch in relationships)-that illustrate communication concepts from the text.BLUpdated-Focus on Research sidebars highlight scholarship that stu
How do the mechanics of interpersonal communication shape the quality and outcomes of human relationships? This textbook, authored by communication scholars Ronald B. Adler, Lawrence B. Rosenfeld, and Russell F. Proctor II, synthesizes extensive academic research to provide a framework for understanding social interaction. The authors utilize a blend of psychological theory and sociological data to explain how individuals manage identity, navigate conflict, and utilize technology within personal and professional contexts.
What You Will Find
Academic reviewers and educators frequently cite this text as a foundational resource for undergraduate communication courses due to its balance of scholarly rigor and accessible application. Experts highlight the inclusion of self-assessment tools as a key feature that encourages students to bridge the gap between theoretical study and personal behavioral change.
Page Count:
464
Publication Date:
2003-07-31
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195167074
ISBN-13:
9780195167078
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