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Communication Research Methods Chapter 9 Exam Questions Answered Correctly!! (100% Pass)

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Communication Research Methods Chapter 9 Exam Questions Answered Correctly!! (100% Pass) textual analysis - Answers The method communication researchers use to describe and interpret the characteristics of a recorded or visual message. transcripts of communication - Answers Verbatim recordings of actual communication, such as written transcripts of courtroom behavior made by a court stenographer or audio/audiovisual recordings of group meetings, often studied in textual analysis. outputs of communication - Answers Messages produced by communicators themselves, including written artifacts (such as letters, graffiti, and books), works of art (such as paintings, statues, and films), and other symbolic outputs (such as footprints and refuse), often studied in textual analysis. archival communication research - Answers Research that involves describing and evaluating communication embedded in existing records of human behavior kept in archives. rhetorical criticism - Answers A form of textual analysis that involves a systematic method for describing, analyzing, interpreting, and evaluating the persuasive force of messages embedded within texts. classical rhetoric - Answers Early rhetorical theory and criticism developed by the Greeks and Romans that examined the characteristics and effects of persuasive public speaking, such as how political speeches enlisted support for the specific leader or helped establish and maintain social order. contemporary rhetorical criticism - Answers A wide range of philosophical, theoretical, and methodological perspectives used to study the persuasive impact of many different types of texts and messages. historical criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that examines how important past events shape and are shaped by rhetorical messages. oral histories - Answers A form of historical criticism and naturalistic inquiry that obtains narratives of personal experiences via in-depth interviews to understand more fully what happened in the past. historical case studies - Answers A form of historical criticism that examines texts related to a single, salient historical event to understand the role played by communication. biographical studies - Answers A form of historical criticism that examines public and private texts of prominent, influential, or otherwise remarkable individuals. social movement studies - Answers A form of historical criticism that examines persuasive strategies used to influence the historical development of specific campaigns and causes. neo-aristotelian criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that evaluates whether the most appropriate and effective means, as articulated in the specific set of criteria given in Aristotle's "Rhetoric," were used to create the rhetorical text(s) intended to influence a particular audience. genre criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that rejects using a single set of criteria to evaluate all persuasive messages, arguing, instead, that standards vary according to the particular type, or genre, of text being studied. dramatistic criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that primarily analyzes texts according to philosopher Kenneth Burke's view that all communication can be viewed in terms of five elements (act, purpose, agent, agency, and scene) that comprise a dramatic event (called pentadic analysis). metaphoric criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that involves identifying and evaluating how rhetors use metaphors to help create a shared reality for an audience. narrative criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that involves analyzing the stories rhetors tell and evaluating how effective they are at shaping an audience's perception of reality. fantasy theme analysis/criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism and naturalistic inquiry, based on the work of Ernest Bormann that examines the common images used to portray narrative elements of situations described in a text with respect to four symbolic categories (fantasy themes, fantasy types, rhetorical visions, and rhetorical communities). feminist criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that analyzes how conceptions of gender are produced and maintained in persuasive messages. content analysis - Answers A form of textual analysis used to identify, enumerate, and analyze occurrences of specific messages and message characteristics embedded in relevant texts. quantitative content analysis - Answers A form of content analysis that involves the systematic and replicable examination of symbols of communication, which have been assigned numeric

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Communication Research Methods Chapter 9 Exam Questions Answered Correctly!! (100% Pass)

textual analysis - Answers The method communication researchers use to describe and interpret the
characteristics of a recorded or visual message.

transcripts of communication - Answers Verbatim recordings of actual communication, such as written
transcripts of courtroom behavior made by a court stenographer or audio/audiovisual recordings of
group meetings, often studied in textual analysis.

outputs of communication - Answers Messages produced by communicators themselves, including
written artifacts (such as letters, graffiti, and books), works of art (such as paintings, statues, and films),
and other symbolic outputs (such as footprints and refuse), often studied in textual analysis.

archival communication research - Answers Research that involves describing and evaluating
communication embedded in existing records of human behavior kept in archives.

rhetorical criticism - Answers A form of textual analysis that involves a systematic method for describing,
analyzing, interpreting, and evaluating the persuasive force of messages embedded within texts.

classical rhetoric - Answers Early rhetorical theory and criticism developed by the Greeks and Romans
that examined the characteristics and effects of persuasive public speaking, such as how political
speeches enlisted support for the specific leader or helped establish and maintain social order.

contemporary rhetorical criticism - Answers A wide range of philosophical, theoretical, and
methodological perspectives used to study the persuasive impact of many different types of texts and
messages.

historical criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that examines how important past events
shape and are shaped by rhetorical messages.

oral histories - Answers A form of historical criticism and naturalistic inquiry that obtains narratives of
personal experiences via in-depth interviews to understand more fully what happened in the past.

historical case studies - Answers A form of historical criticism that examines texts related to a single,
salient historical event to understand the role played by communication.

biographical studies - Answers A form of historical criticism that examines public and private texts of
prominent, influential, or otherwise remarkable individuals.

social movement studies - Answers A form of historical criticism that examines persuasive strategies
used to influence the historical development of specific campaigns and causes.

neo-aristotelian criticism - Answers A form of rhetorical criticism that evaluates whether the most
appropriate and effective means, as articulated in the specific set of criteria given in Aristotle's
"Rhetoric," were used to create the rhetorical text(s) intended to influence a particular audience.

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