Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
Maureen Minielli, Marta Lukacovic, Sergei Samoilenko, Deborrah Uecker, & Michael Finch
Part I: Communication Theory & Application Trends in the Post-Soviet Space
Chapter 1: Reflections on the Development of Intercultural Communication in Russia
Olga Leontovich
Chapter 2: Grassroots Science Communication in Russia
Ekaterina Bogomoletc & Dmitrii Malkov
Chapter 3: Urban Communication and Media in Russia
Olga Pichugina
Chapter 4: Workplace Documentation in Post-Soviet Belarus and Russia: Insights for Organizational Communication
Natalia Matveeva, Lilia Akhmerova, & Irina Savich
Chapter 5: Rhetorical Analysis of the Ukrainian Film Julia Blue: A Picture of Non-Western (Non-Linear) Identity
Michael R. Finch
Part II: Communication Theory & Application Trends in Central Eastern Europe
Chapter 6: Transitioning from Communist Propaganda to Government Communication in the Czech Republic
Denisa Hejlova
Chapter 7: Slovakia as a Convenient ‘Laboratory’ to Extend the Theory of Securitized Framing:
The Case of Far Right’s Frame Shifting between Euroscepticism and Europhilia
Marta N. Lukacovic
Chapter 8: The Past, the Memory and the Polish Media: Collective Memory as an Object of Manipulation
Aleksandra Synowiec
Part III: Accounts of Trends in Academic Publishing on Communication; Disseminating Knowledge in and about Post-Socialist Societies
Chapter 9: Central European Journal of Communication: Knowledge Share Community
Michał Głowacki, Agnieszka Stępińska, Jacek Mikucki, Róża Norström, Dagmara Sidyk, & Julia Trzcińska
Chapter 10: Russian Journal of Communication: Reflections on the First Decade
Igor E. Klyukanov & Galina V. Sinekopova
Chapter 11: Publishing a Communication Textbook for Russian Students
Olga I. Matyash
Part IV: Applications of Communication Theory and Research to Pedagogy; Teaching in and about Post-Socialist Societies
Chapter 12: Intercultural Communication Pedagogy in Lithuania: Listening to Viewpoints
Andrew C. Jones & Eugenija Kungienė
Chapter 13: Teaching Communication in Russia and Kazakhstan: An International Scholar’s Perspective
Olga I. Matyash
Chapter 14: Interpersonal Communication and Perception Differences between Russia and the United States: Changes since 2009?
Deborrah Uecker & Jacqueline Schmidt
Conclusion
Maureen Minielli, Marta Lukacovic, Sergei Samoilenko, Deborrah Uecker, & Michael Finch
About the Editors and Contributing Authors