What if framing isn't something media does to us, but the architecture through which meaning becomes possible at all?For more than three decades, communication scholars have studied how frames influence opinion. Framing as Experience asks a more fundamental question: what makes framing possible in the first place?Drawing on Gestalt psychology, phenomenology, symbolic interactionism, and decades of political communication research, Andrew Paul Williams reconstructs framing not as a media effect or rhetorical strategy, but as the condition under which situations become recognizable, inhabited, and sustained over time. In environments of saturation, ambiguity, and polarization, frames do not simply shape opinion-they organize perception, stabilize horizons, and define what feels thinkable.Rather than treating framing as one theory among many, Framing as Experience develops a broader account of how people orient themselves within complex social worlds. It connects communication theory with philosophy, psychology, sociology, and political communication to explain why certain interpretations endure, why others collapse, and how individuals navigate increasingly saturated information environments.In 2019, leading framing scholars asked whether framing had reached the limits of its explanatory power as a research tradition. Framing as Experience responds by arguing that the field's extraordinary empirical success came at the cost of theoretical depth-and by rebuilding that foundation from the ground up.Inside, you'll discover: - Frame durability - why some interpretations remain stable long after measurable media effects have faded- Frame fatigue - why sustained ambiguity produces interpretive exhaustion- Frame imposition - how meaning becomes enforced rather than negotiated under conditions of distrust- Frame literacy and frame fluency - practical capacities for navigating saturated information environments without collapse or cynicismDedicated to the memory of Lynda Lee Kaid, Framing as Experience is written for scholars and graduate students in communication, political communication, media studies, sociology, and related fields-as well as thoughtful readers seeking a deeper understanding of how people make sense of an increasingly complex world.
AmazonPagina's: 229, Paperback, Williams Press
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