Critical Intercultural Communication, Overview

Author(s):  
Thomas K. Nakayama ◽  
Judith N. Martin
2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 411-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satoshi Toyosaki

Whiteness studies has become a popular topic for many critical intercultural communication researchers and pedagogues. Since my encounter with whiteness studies, I have been struggling with a practice of whiteness pedagogy. As a nonwhite pedagogue, I often experience dissonance in translating whiteness research into whiteness pedagogy. In this article, I analyze and make sense of this dissonance. I weave both my and my students’ stories and my ethnographic observations of “communication and race” classrooms in pursuit of a relational pedagogy of whiteness. I call for pedagogical love as a site of critical labor that creates difference and potentially interrupts racist systems and structures local to our everyday lives.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 49-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinsuke Eguchi ◽  
Mary Jane Collier

In this essay, we write about our collaborative experiences with faculty mentoring/allying relationships using autoethnography. From two different locations of academic faculty standing, we articulate that faculty mentoring/allying relationships can be sites of critical intercultural communication praxis in which differences informed by historical and existing power relations are productively discussed and acknowledged. However, these are easier to talk about than to practice. Thus, we share our continuing struggle to complicate the notion of faculty mentoring/allying and offer our experiences as complex, fluid, multiple, and contextual productions and constitutions of differences.


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