A Map of Communication
Communication is a somewhat-teachable subject. It isn't as efficiently teachable as say, mathematics. But it is not as unteachable as say, "relationships." Beyond the basics, there are things that you can say about it. They aren't well-organized sorts of things, but there is some coherence. Here is a map of the parts of the territory that I've traversed (or at least viewed from a distance).

- If you go towards form, you may end up not caring about what you communicate at all, so long as the are able to cultivate your sense of verbal precision. I think of James Joyce and David Foster Wallace as belonging in this group. Pushing the boundaries of expressivity becomes your calling.
- Or you may travel towards content, where language turns transparent and eventually disappears. Here you find Dickens, Mark Twain, Edward Gibbon. On this road, the complexity of what you want to say may overwhelm your ability to say it, something that happened to Hegel. If you go too far, you may leave cross another ocean and end up on the continent of the humanities, where you lose yourself in history and culture. On this road too, you will find metaphor, narrative and Lakoff.
- Traveling towards intention leads to the subtle and private pleasures of one-on-one influence, persuasion and occasionally, manipulation. Along this road, you'll meet sophisticated managers or socialites; the Machiavellis, Rasputins and Kissingers. Traveling far enough leads to the lands of psychology and sociology.
4 Comments
What a profoundly vivid image you have generated in my mind's eye with this idea. I very much like the map you have provided, too. Admittedly I am one who scans the images of a document prior to reading the text because I feel much better oriented with the material through doing so. This seems to assist me with comprehension and retention of what I read.
Anyway, the point was that I really felt at home with the concept you presented here even before I read a single word of the prose. The map and the text are very accurate in my mind, and I found it very entertaining --- even enlightening --- to read this.
Thank you!
I'll certainly be updating this map as my visualization improves (and maybe when I find a good artist :)). I am unhappy about not showing how universities play a role, non-verbal communication, negotiations... wish communication were simple enough to visualize as a 12-step maturation scale where 'black belts' on the top would be the experts. Unfortunately, communication maturity is a branching tree...
Fascinating! I love the map, and your travels! I wonder if that preverbal ocean is really tranquil, or if has large surf, glacial chunks and white caps.
Envisioning my own map of communication steers me into other terrain. We all wear bifocals, with a lens of 'where we come from' --our unique experience -- and the lens of 'where we're going ' determining/enabling our unique visions.
The field of communication is huge -- which makes it all the more fun to consider the many maps there could be.
Thanks for such a thought-provoking post!
Thanks Sharon. I like your bifocals metaphor. I wonder if there might be an interesting way to visualize combinations of maps made by different people.