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Theory Key Names
10th Edition

Annotated list of scholars and terms, from the Instructors Manual and margin notes in the text

List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details

Chapter 18Symbolic Convergence Theory

  • Dramatizing message
    • Imaginative language by a group member describing past, future, or outside events; creative interpretations of the there-and-then.
  • Fantasy chain
    • A symbolic explosion of lively agreement within a group in response to a member’s dramatizing message.
  • Fantasy
    • The creative and imaginative shared interpretation of events that fulfills a group’s psychological or rhetorical needs.
  • Fantasy theme
    • Content of the fantasy that has chained out within a group; SCT’s basic unit of analysis.
  • Symbolic cue
    • An agreed-upon trigger that sets off group members to respond as they did when they first shared the fantasy.
  • Fantasy type
    • A cluster of related fantasy themes; greater abstractions incorporating several concrete fantasy themes that exist when shared meaning is taken for granted.
  • Symbolic convergence
    • Two or more private symbol worlds incline toward each other, come more closely together, or even overlap; group consciousness, cohesiveness.
  • Rhetorical vision
    • A composite drama that catches up large groups of people into a common symbolic reality.
  • Fantasy theme analysis
    • A type of rhetorical criticism used to detect fantasy themes and rhetorical visions; the interpretive methodology of SCT.

 



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Theory Key Names
10th Edition

Annotated list of scholars and terms, from the Instructors Manual and margin notes in the text

List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details

Chapter 18Symbolic Convergence Theory

  • Dramatizing message
    • Imaginative language by a group member describing past, future, or outside events; creative interpretations of the there-and-then.
  • Fantasy chain
    • A symbolic explosion of lively agreement within a group in response to a member’s dramatizing message.
  • Fantasy
    • The creative and imaginative shared interpretation of events that fulfills a group’s psychological or rhetorical needs.
  • Fantasy theme
    • Content of the fantasy that has chained out within a group; SCT’s basic unit of analysis.
  • Symbolic cue
    • An agreed-upon trigger that sets off group members to respond as they did when they first shared the fantasy.
  • Fantasy type
    • A cluster of related fantasy themes; greater abstractions incorporating several concrete fantasy themes that exist when shared meaning is taken for granted.
  • Symbolic convergence
    • Two or more private symbol worlds incline toward each other, come more closely together, or even overlap; group consciousness, cohesiveness.
  • Rhetorical vision
    • A composite drama that catches up large groups of people into a common symbolic reality.
  • Fantasy theme analysis
    • A type of rhetorical criticism used to detect fantasy themes and rhetorical visions; the interpretive methodology of SCT.

 



You can access the Key Names for a particular chapter in several ways:

  • Switch to View by Theory, then select the desired theory/chapter from the drop-down list at the top of the page. Look in the list of available resources.
  • To quickly find a theory by chapter number, use the Table of Contents and link from there. It will take you directly to the theory with available options highlighted.
  • You can also use the Theory List, which will take you directly to the theory with available options highlighted.

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