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From facts to stories or from stories to facts? Analyzing public relations history in public relations textbooks
Authors:Peggy Hoy  Oliver Raaz  Stefan Wehmeier
Affiliation:1. Vodafone D2 GmbH, Meißner Str. 79, 01445 Radebeul, Germany;2. Department for Public Relations, Institute of Communication and Media, Science, University of Leipzig, Dölitzerstr. 50, 04277 Leipzig, Germany;3. Department for Communication Studies, Institute of German Philology, University of Greifswald, Rubenowstr. 3, 17487 Greifswald, Germany
Abstract:Leading PR-historiography provides a picture of an evolutionary process of public relations activity in which PR develops from a manipulative to a two-way, dialogue-oriented communication process. We analyzed a number of public relations textbooks to determine how their authors present PR history. Our major findings are: (1) The construct of the progressive development of PR is evenly spread throughout textbooks; (2) The majority of textbooks simply rely on storytelling and not on a theory-driven approach to PR history as we would prefer to see in PR textbooks that are used to teach university students; (3) The PR history presented in the books seems to be influenced by a paradigmatic stance. However, citation context analysis did not enable us to trace back the dissemination of this viewpoint to one paradigmatic author, and so we assume that the so-called obliteration effect prevents this proof.
Keywords:Public relations history   Teaching   Textbook analysis   Historiography   Citation analysis   Citation context analysis
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