Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators

Religion communicators in the United States face a conceptual challenge. Is their mission to sell a product, shape public opinion, package and distribute information, or manage interactions with social groups? These missions assume fundamentally different understandings of relationality. How do fait...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Douglas F. Cannon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Saint Paul University 2011-01-01
Series:Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1101/v4i1_cannon.pdf
id doaj-792177a119dc4a0ab3982613f913440f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-792177a119dc4a0ab3982613f913440f2020-12-02T02:44:24ZengSaint Paul UniversityGlobal Media Journal: Canadian Edition1918-59012011-01-01412141Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion CommunicatorsDouglas F. CannonReligion communicators in the United States face a conceptual challenge. Is their mission to sell a product, shape public opinion, package and distribute information, or manage interactions with social groups? These missions assume fundamentally different understandings of relationality. How do faith groups understand relationships? Are they based on community or some other set of attributes? If relationships relate to community, is that community based on shared belief or creation? Which view of community best fosters relationships that encourage cooperation and discourage polarization? The answers guide how faith groups value dialogue, respond to disagreements and understand public relations. This paper uses a hermeneutical approach and results from surveys of U.S. religion communicators and faith group leaders to suggest answers to those questions. The goal is to consider how religion communicators and faith group leaders understand public relations, how communicators approach their work and how they rate their skills for dealing with conflicts.http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1101/v4i1_cannon.pdfFaith GroupsInterfaith DialoguePublic RelationsRelationalityReligion Communicators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Douglas F. Cannon
spellingShingle Douglas F. Cannon
Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators
Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Faith Groups
Interfaith Dialogue
Public Relations
Relationality
Religion Communicators
author_facet Douglas F. Cannon
author_sort Douglas F. Cannon
title Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators
title_short Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators
title_full Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators
title_fullStr Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Relationality: A Challenge for Religion Communicators
title_sort understanding relationality: a challenge for religion communicators
publisher Saint Paul University
series Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
issn 1918-5901
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Religion communicators in the United States face a conceptual challenge. Is their mission to sell a product, shape public opinion, package and distribute information, or manage interactions with social groups? These missions assume fundamentally different understandings of relationality. How do faith groups understand relationships? Are they based on community or some other set of attributes? If relationships relate to community, is that community based on shared belief or creation? Which view of community best fosters relationships that encourage cooperation and discourage polarization? The answers guide how faith groups value dialogue, respond to disagreements and understand public relations. This paper uses a hermeneutical approach and results from surveys of U.S. religion communicators and faith group leaders to suggest answers to those questions. The goal is to consider how religion communicators and faith group leaders understand public relations, how communicators approach their work and how they rate their skills for dealing with conflicts.
topic Faith Groups
Interfaith Dialogue
Public Relations
Relationality
Religion Communicators
url http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1101/v4i1_cannon.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT douglasfcannon understandingrelationalityachallengeforreligioncommunicators
_version_ 1724409831603830784