Igor E. Klyukanov is Professor of Communication in the Department of Communication Studies at Eastern Washington University, U.S.A. He has authored numerous articles, book chapters, and books in communication theory, semiotics, translation studies, general linguistics, and intercultural communication. His works have been published in the U.S., Russia, England, Spain, Costa Rica, Serbia, Bulgaria, India, and Morocco. His textbook Principles of Intercultural Communication has been adopted by over 30 colleges and universities in the U.S. His monograph A Communication Universe: Manifestations of Meaning, Stagings of Significance won the 2012 NCA Philosophy of Communication Division Distinguished Book Award. He is also the translator and editor of Mikhail Epstein’s book The Transformative Humanities: A Manifesto. He served as an associate editor of The American Journal of Semiotics and is the founding editor of Russian Journal of Communication. Galina V. Sinekopova is Professor of Communication in the Department of Communication Studies at Eastern Washington University, U.S.A. She has published articles in such journals as Journal of Communications, Journal of Language and Social Psychology, and Listening: Journal of Communication Ethics, Religion, and Culture. Recently, her chapter (co-authored with Igor E. Klyukanov) on the press in post-Soviet societies has appeared in The Handbook of Media and Mass Communication Theory. She has presented her research at conferences in the U.S., Canada, China, Taiwan, Turkey, Russia, and Bulgaria. She served as a guest editor of two issues of International Journal of Communication.
In today's globally connected world, communication functions as the human action binding us all together. Our shared destiny emerges from our history and our culture. Communication Theory Through the Ages takes us on a guided tour of the questions each generation asks of itself, and , the answers that other generations suggest we engage. The experiential wisdom of philosophy blends with the eloquence of rhetoric resulting in a pedagogy of discovery. Students and teachers, beginners and professionals, will delight in the mindful journey of this book written for our time! -Richard L. Lanigan, Laureate Fellow and Executive Director, International Communicology Institute, Washington, DC, USA Some ontological inquiries about the human `wonderland' - existential in time and space, with body and mind, from individual to community perspectives, on me and God, of language and culture - are offered in this book. The authors play the excellent role of guides taking their readers to `must-see' spots of the human wonderland with some interesting stories of their observation. The best part of the journey to this wonderland will begin when a reader empirically engages in exploring his/her existential wonderland. And, on this journey if the reader happens to meet his/her `subject,' witnessing all along, he/she might confirm if all is in the mind. -Du-Won Lee, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Media Communication Studies, Chongju University, South Korea