Research Program
Sonja K. Foss
The basic question that guides my research
program is one of boundaries and scope. I am interested in discovering
and assessing the methodological and ideological boundaries that
communication scholars construct around theories and critical
practices in the communication field to discover their impact
on our conceptions of communication. My focus is on how constraints
inherent in our choices about definitions, values that undergird
our theories, and the data of our studies unnecessarily limit
our understanding of communication.
I am interested in this question for two
primary reasons. One is that I want to facilitate a more comprehensive
description of communication processes--to describe as fully as
possible the diverse communicative experiences that characterize
symbol use in all of its variety. A second explanation for my
interest in this question is that I am committed to the use of
communication to challenge and transform the ideology of domination
that pervades Western culture. A critical assessment of our theories
and practices enables me to discover which of them reinscribe
and perpetuate this ideology and how they might be transformed
by expanding definitions, theories, and other boundaries.
My work in the area of feminist perspectives
on communication is one way in which I explore and assess methodological
and ideological boundaries in communication. My initial work in
this area was designed largely to incorporate the communicative
practices of women into our theories about communication. My early
efforts in this area, then, focused on the inclusion of womens
voices, and I studied, for example, the Equal Rights Amendment,
the controversy over women priests in the Episcopal Church, and
Judy Chicagos work of art, The Dinner Party. The
focus of my efforts in this area now is on questioning and reconceptualizing
critical methods, constructs, and theories to reflect the perspectives
of women and other marginalized groups as well as feminist values
such as self-determination and equality.
My work on invitational rhetoric is one
example of my reconceptualization work from a feminist perspective.
It constitutes an effort to reconceptualize the definition of
rhetoric from feminist principles and to challenge the presumption
that has been granted to persuasion in the definition. The textbook
on presentational speaking I coauthored with Karen Foss, Inviting
Transformation, is another example of my reconceptualization
work. We began with a goal of including the speaking practices,
traditions, and values of marginalized groups such as women and
people of color in presentational speaking, and we discovered
that to incorporate the diverse perspectives of these groups,
the basic model of public speaking had to be transformed.
A similar project was Feminist Rhetorical
Theories, which I coauthored with Karen Foss and Cindy Griffin
(I wrote the chapters on bell hooks, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Sally Miller
Gearhart, and Cheris Kramarae). In this book, the rhetorical theories
of nine feminist theorists are explicated, providing the communication
field with alternatives to traditional rhetorical theories. Other
work in this area included my guest editorship (with Eileen Berlin
Ray) of a special issue of Communication Studies on theorizing
communication from submerged and marginalized groups.
My study of the visual image as a communicative
phenomenon is yet another lens through which I question and sometimes
seek to alter the boundaries and scope of the theory and practice
of communication. When visual images are the data of studies,
our critical practices and theories about communication must be
expanded to allow for the characteristics of this type of symbol.
I am particularly interested in how visual symbols affect the
lay person--someone with no training in art, art history, art
education, design, or aesthetics. Among the questions that interest
me in this area are: How do visual symbols differ from verbal
symbols, and what differences do those differences make? How do
visual images construct their appeal?
Examples of my work with visual images include
a study of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which provided the means
for studying ambiguity in communicative processes. In a study
of body art (art in which artists use their own bodies as their
primary means of expression), I was interested in the process
by which audiences interpret ambiguous works and the messages
they are likely to develop from them. In another study, I worked
to develop a theory of how nonrepresentational, ambiguous images
construct their appeal, using as my data Memphis furniture, the
pool room in Elvis Presleys Graceland, and Jeanne Claude
and Christos Valley Curtain. I also have proposed
a schema for the rhetorical evaluation of visual images.
I plan to continue to develop the two threads
of my research program--my work with feminist perspectives and
with visual imagery--in the future. Both seem to me to have the
potential to open up the discipline of communication in important
ways, and I hope to be able to continue to contribute to that
effort.
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