Department of Communication Studies
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Item Blocked Out; Athletic Voices and WNBA Uniform Politics(2021) Bagley, Meredith M.; Liao, Judy; University of Alabama TuscaloosaWNBA uniform politics in 2016 coalesced around three distinct voices: corporate sponsor logos, sanctioned pro-LGBTQ demonstration, and an unsanctioned Black Lives Matter player protest. We argue that uniform politics reveal a cautious, commercially linked, single-issue approach to social engagement in the WNBA.Item Being there, being here: What critical field methods can tell us about WWC 2019(2021) Bagley, Meredith M.; Mary Anne, Taylor; University of Alabama TuscaloosaWhile studies of rhetoric and discourse have recently (albeit slowly) embraced a turn to “field methods”, studies of sport discourse have remained reliant on textual or mediated artifacts. This is concerning to the authors given the ability of rhetorical field methods to capture “live” and “processual” rhetoric such as that occurring in and around live sporting events (Middleton, Senda-Cook & Endres, 2011). In this study we leverage the authors’ various experiences “being there” for the 2019 FIFA World Cup to ask what the women’s soccer World Cup meant on social, cultural, and rhetorical levels.Item More than a checked box: emerging adult women’s disclosure of family health history during healthcare provider appointments(University of Alabama Libraries, 2021) Owen, Emily Brady; Carmack, Heather J.; University of Alabama TuscaloosaThe process of disclosure is an essential part of the process of healthcare. Individuals must disclose information to healthcare providers in order to received accurate care and an accurate diagnosis (Valdez et al., 2010). Although it is a crucial part of the healthcare process, individual’s privacy boundaries affect the amount of private information an individual will disclose. Petronio’s (2002) Communication Privacy Management Theory states that an individual owns their private information and has the ability to decide who to share the information with, what information to share, and when to share the information. In addition to owning the private information, individuals create symbolic privacy boundaries when deciding who to disclose to. This thesis utilizes Petronio’s (2002) Communication Privacy Management Theory to explore the lived experiences of emerging adult women and their experiences disclosing family health history and women’s health to both family members and healthcare providers. In- depth interviews were utilized to understand the lived experiences of the participants and led to the findings of familial core criteria, individual motivations, provider communication catalysts, and privacy boundary coordination.Item The Creation of Defensiveness in Social Interaction II: A Model of Defensive Communication among Romantic CouplesBecker, Jennifer A. H.; Ellevold, Barbara; Stamp, Glen H.; University of Alabama TuscaloosaItem Strategic Communication during Marital Relationship Dissolution: Disengagement Resistance StrategiesBuchanan, Marcy C.; O'Hair, H. Dan; Becker, Jennifer A. H.; University of Alabama TuscaloosaThis study investigated communication strategies used by divorced individuals who did not wish their marriages to end (non-initiators). Participants were 270 divorced persons drawn from divorce recovery and support groups and network sampling. An adaptation of Buss’s (1988) taxonomy of partner retention tactics served to capture communication strategies of noninitiators during marital dissolution. A factor analysis revealed that four disengagement resistance strategies, in descending order of reported use—Commitment, Alignment, Negativity, and Harm—are used by non-initiators during the process of marital dissolution.Item Defensive Communication and Burnout in the Workplace: The Mediating Role of Leader-Member ExchangeBecker, Jennifer A. H.; Halbesleben, Jonathon R. B.; O'Hair, H. Dan; University of Alabama TuscaloosaThis paper investigates the relationship between defensive communication in performance appraisal settings by considering the mediating effect of leader-member exchange relationships. In a study of employees of a United States federal fire department, defensive communication was associated with lower quality leader-member exchange relationships, which in turn was related to burnout. We discuss the implications of these findings, particularly as they apply to organizations and their employees, as well as limitations and directions for future research.