Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation

This study employs qualitative methods to: (1) compare and contrast public conversations about a complex social phenomenon with my experience of that phenomenon, and (2) explore the nature of those public conversations and their impact on planetary transformation. This study is divided into two part...

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Main Author: Cannon, Patrick Owen
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/654
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1653&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-16532019-10-04T05:20:38Z Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation Cannon, Patrick Owen This study employs qualitative methods to: (1) compare and contrast public conversations about a complex social phenomenon with my experience of that phenomenon, and (2) explore the nature of those public conversations and their impact on planetary transformation. This study is divided into two parts. Part One of this dissertation compares my personal experience with Landmark Education Corporation, a private personal development company, with how it is characterized in public conversations. The public conversations chosen for analysis include: (1) an episode of the television show, Law and Order: Criminal Intent (Balcer, et al., 2003), (2) a Time Magazine article about Landmark Education Corporation (Faltermayer, 1998 March 16), and (3) psychological research on large group awareness trainings, of which Landmark Education courses are one example. Each of these public conversations contrasts significantly with my personal experience and therefore fails to account for what I see as the potential for work like Landmark's to transform the conversations that constitute our society, and ultimately, life on our planet. To help account for the value I see in Landmark's courses, Part Two of the dissertation examines the communication of Landmark participants to ascertain whether their communication in fact poses the possibility of global transformation through open, compassionate, reciprocal communication practices learned in Landmark courses. It draws from qualitative interviews, a focus group, and a focus group observation interview. Based on the results of this research, I argue that the communication of Landmark participants has the power to transform society, and that the public conversations about Landmark Education examined here are a drag on global transformation. Most broadly, I respond to the following question: When we examine particular public discourses about unusual social phenomena, what can we learn about the relationship between these discourses and the social phenomena aimed at transforming them? 2007-06-14T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/654 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1653&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Abraham Maslow Politics 3 Cults Qualitative methods Focus group Autoethnography Society of the Spectacle
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Abraham Maslow
Politics 3
Cults
Qualitative methods
Focus group
Autoethnography
Society of the Spectacle
spellingShingle Abraham Maslow
Politics 3
Cults
Qualitative methods
Focus group
Autoethnography
Society of the Spectacle
Cannon, Patrick Owen
Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation
description This study employs qualitative methods to: (1) compare and contrast public conversations about a complex social phenomenon with my experience of that phenomenon, and (2) explore the nature of those public conversations and their impact on planetary transformation. This study is divided into two parts. Part One of this dissertation compares my personal experience with Landmark Education Corporation, a private personal development company, with how it is characterized in public conversations. The public conversations chosen for analysis include: (1) an episode of the television show, Law and Order: Criminal Intent (Balcer, et al., 2003), (2) a Time Magazine article about Landmark Education Corporation (Faltermayer, 1998 March 16), and (3) psychological research on large group awareness trainings, of which Landmark Education courses are one example. Each of these public conversations contrasts significantly with my personal experience and therefore fails to account for what I see as the potential for work like Landmark's to transform the conversations that constitute our society, and ultimately, life on our planet. To help account for the value I see in Landmark's courses, Part Two of the dissertation examines the communication of Landmark participants to ascertain whether their communication in fact poses the possibility of global transformation through open, compassionate, reciprocal communication practices learned in Landmark courses. It draws from qualitative interviews, a focus group, and a focus group observation interview. Based on the results of this research, I argue that the communication of Landmark participants has the power to transform society, and that the public conversations about Landmark Education examined here are a drag on global transformation. Most broadly, I respond to the following question: When we examine particular public discourses about unusual social phenomena, what can we learn about the relationship between these discourses and the social phenomena aimed at transforming them?
author Cannon, Patrick Owen
author_facet Cannon, Patrick Owen
author_sort Cannon, Patrick Owen
title Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation
title_short Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation
title_full Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation
title_fullStr Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation
title_full_unstemmed Communication for Planetary Transformation and the Drag of Public Conversations: The Case of Landmark Education Corporation
title_sort communication for planetary transformation and the drag of public conversations: the case of landmark education corporation
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2007
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/654
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1653&context=etd
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