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Book Summary of Bridges Not Walls by John Stewart, ed.
Citation:
Bridges Not Walls. John Stewart, ed. 6th edition, (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995), 526 pp.
This Book Summary written by: Tanya Glaser, Conflict Research Consortium
The essays in Part One focus on the basic elements of
communication. Three readings serve to introduce the relational
approach to interpersonal communication. In his Introduction,
Stewart argues that one's quality of life is directly connected
to one's quality of communication. More than just the exchange of
information, communication is a person-building activity.
Subsequent readings explore both the verbal and non-verbal
elements of communication.
Part Two focuses on the input or perception side of
communication. The first set of readings discusses the awareness
of one's own values, and the awareness of one's own actions and
responses within communication. Many specific barriers to
communication are described. The next set of readings focuses on
the awareness of others. The authors discuss the subjective
nature of perception and the ways in which stereotypes structure
perceptions of other individuals, of relationships, and of social
events. The last readings in this section address listening.
Essays describe common misconceptions about listening, and
describe the kinds of responses that indicate effective
listening. The final essay presents a new, dialogic approach to
listening.
Part Three addresses self expression and self disclosure in
communication. Authors discuss the uses of I-statements and
you-statements, and the paradoxical power of vulnerability. They
also introduce guidelines for more effective self-expression.
This topic concludes with an essay which argues that open honest
communication may, in certain situations, do more harm than good.
Subsequent readings explore different expressive styles, and
particularly gender differences.
The readings in Part Four apply the findings from earlier
sections to particular types of interpersonal communication:
friendships, family relationships, and intimate relationships.
The first set of readings discusses communication in the context
of relationships, examines relationships as a process of
negotiation, and explores communication as a person-building
process. Subsequent readings discuss friendship, families, and
intimate relationships more specifically.
Part Five explores conflict and communication across cultural
differences. The first set of readings distinguishes productive
from destructive conflicts, and describes some of the processes
by which conflict become destructive. These readings also
distinguish between defensive and supportive conflict climates,
and explore ways of dealing with anger. The second set of
readings explores the problems encountered in communicating
across differences. Essays address cultural, ethnic, racial, age,
sexual orientation, and disability differences.
Part Six explores various overall approaches to interpersonal
communication. C. Roland Christiansen takes a teacher's approach
to interpersonal communication. Carl Rogers discusses
interpersonal communication from a psychotherapist's perspective.
Martin Buber takes a philosophical approach. Each of these essays
offers a different synthesis of the issues and techniques
discussed in the earlier sections.
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