This commentary argues that communication research’s main problem is reputational. The field’s marginal status—a product of its peculiar institutional history, with roots in vocational training—means that our work is not read by scholars from other disciplines. My claim is that the vocational model exacts a steep reputational price. The gap in prestige between the mainline disciplines and communication means that our scholarship is simply not read. Exiled to the professional-school margins of the university, communication scholars toil away in well-heeled obscurity. In exchange for relinquishing jurisdiction over media and communication, the commentary concludes, we might join a dynamic crossroads—where the vocational underwriting will not loom as large.

Aharony, N (2012) Library and Information Science research areas: A content analysis of articles from the top 10 journals 2007–8. Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 44(1): 2735. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals, ISI
Boczkowski, P, Lievrouw, L (2008) Bridging STS and communication studies: Scholarship on media and information technologies. In: Hackett, EJ, Amsterdamska, O, Lynch, M (eds) The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 949978. Google Scholar
Becher, T, Trowler, P (2001) Academic Tribes and Territories, New York: McGraw-Hill Education. Google Scholar
Berger, CR (1991) Communication theories and other curios. Communication Monographs 58(1): 101113. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Chaffee, SH, Rogers, EM (1997) Wilbur Schramm, the founder. In: Chaffee, SH, Rogers, EM (eds) The Beginnings of Communication Study in America: A Personal Memoir, Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, pp. 126176. Google Scholar
Corner, J (2013) Is there a ‘field’ of media research? The ‘fragmentation’ issue revisited. Media, Culture and Society 35(8): 10111018. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals, ISI
Cronin, B, Meho, LI (2008) The shifting balance of intellectual trade in information studies. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 59(4): 551564. Google Scholar, Crossref
Downey, DJ, Wagner, WE, Hohm, CF (2008) The status of sociology within the academy: Where we are, why we’re there, and how to change it. The American Sociologist 39(2–3): 193214. Google Scholar, Crossref
Funkhouser, ET (1996) The evaluative use of citation analysis for communication journals. Human Communication Research 22(4): 563574. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Hacking, I (1996) The looping effects of human kinds. In: Sperber, D, Premack, D, Premack, AJ (eds) Causal Cognition: A Multidisciplinary Approach, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 351383. Google Scholar, Crossref
Leydesdorff, L, Probst, C (2009) The delineation of an interdisciplinary specialty in terms of a journal set: The case of communication studies. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 60(8): 17091718. Google Scholar, Crossref
Livingstone, S (2015) From mass to social media? Advancing accounts of social change. Social Media + Society 1(1): 13. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals
Ostriker JP and Kuh CV (eds) (2003) Assessing Research-Doctorate Programs: A Methodology Study. Washington, DC: National Research Council. Google Scholar
Peters, JD (1986) Institutional sources of intellectual poverty in communication research. Communication Research 13(4): 527559. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals, ISI
Peters, JD (2011) Sweet lemons. International Journal of Communication 5: 14671471. Google Scholar, ISI
Pooley JD (2016) The four cultures: Media studies at the crossroads. Social Media + Society 2(1): 1–4. Google Scholar
Pooley JD (2016) James W. Carey and Communication Research: Reputation at the University’s Margins. New York: Peter Lang. Google Scholar
Reeves, B, Borgman, CL (1983) A bibliometric evaluation of core journals in communication research. Human Communication Research 10(1): 119136. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Rice, RE, Borgman, CL, Reeves, B (1988) Citation networks of communication journals, 1977–1985: Cliques and positions, citations made and citations received. Human Communication Research 15(2): 256283. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Schramm, WL (1963) Communication research in the United States. In: Schramm, WL (ed.) The Science of Human Communication, New York: Basic Books, pp. 116. Google Scholar
So, CY (1988) Citation patterns of core communication journals: An assessment of the developmental status of communication. Human Communication Research 15(2): 236255. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Tunstall, J (1983) The trouble with U.S. communication research. Journal of Communication 33(3): 9295. Google Scholar
Whitley, R (1984) The Intellectual and Social Organization of the Sciences, New York: Clarendon Press. Google Scholar
Yan, E, Ding, Y, Cronin, B (2013) A bird’s-eye view of scientific trading: Dependency relations among fields of science. Journal of Informetrics 7(2): 249264. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
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This commentary argues that communication research’s main problem is reputational. The field’s marginal status—a product of its peculiar institutional history, with roots in vocational training—means that our work is not read by scholars from other disciplines. My claim is that the vocational model exacts a steep reputational price. The gap in prestige between the mainline disciplines and communication means that our scholarship is simply not read. Exiled to the professional-school margins of the university, communication scholars toil away in well-heeled obscurity. In exchange for relinquishing jurisdiction over media and communication, the commentary concludes, we might join a dynamic crossroads—where the vocational underwriting will not loom as large.

Aharony, N (2012) Library and Information Science research areas: A content analysis of articles from the top 10 journals 2007–8. Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 44(1): 2735. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals, ISI
Boczkowski, P, Lievrouw, L (2008) Bridging STS and communication studies: Scholarship on media and information technologies. In: Hackett, EJ, Amsterdamska, O, Lynch, M (eds) The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 949978. Google Scholar
Becher, T, Trowler, P (2001) Academic Tribes and Territories, New York: McGraw-Hill Education. Google Scholar
Berger, CR (1991) Communication theories and other curios. Communication Monographs 58(1): 101113. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Chaffee, SH, Rogers, EM (1997) Wilbur Schramm, the founder. In: Chaffee, SH, Rogers, EM (eds) The Beginnings of Communication Study in America: A Personal Memoir, Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, pp. 126176. Google Scholar
Corner, J (2013) Is there a ‘field’ of media research? The ‘fragmentation’ issue revisited. Media, Culture and Society 35(8): 10111018. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals, ISI
Cronin, B, Meho, LI (2008) The shifting balance of intellectual trade in information studies. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 59(4): 551564. Google Scholar, Crossref
Downey, DJ, Wagner, WE, Hohm, CF (2008) The status of sociology within the academy: Where we are, why we’re there, and how to change it. The American Sociologist 39(2–3): 193214. Google Scholar, Crossref
Funkhouser, ET (1996) The evaluative use of citation analysis for communication journals. Human Communication Research 22(4): 563574. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Hacking, I (1996) The looping effects of human kinds. In: Sperber, D, Premack, D, Premack, AJ (eds) Causal Cognition: A Multidisciplinary Approach, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 351383. Google Scholar, Crossref
Leydesdorff, L, Probst, C (2009) The delineation of an interdisciplinary specialty in terms of a journal set: The case of communication studies. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 60(8): 17091718. Google Scholar, Crossref
Livingstone, S (2015) From mass to social media? Advancing accounts of social change. Social Media + Society 1(1): 13. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals
Ostriker JP and Kuh CV (eds) (2003) Assessing Research-Doctorate Programs: A Methodology Study. Washington, DC: National Research Council. Google Scholar
Peters, JD (1986) Institutional sources of intellectual poverty in communication research. Communication Research 13(4): 527559. Google Scholar, SAGE Journals, ISI
Peters, JD (2011) Sweet lemons. International Journal of Communication 5: 14671471. Google Scholar, ISI
Pooley JD (2016) The four cultures: Media studies at the crossroads. Social Media + Society 2(1): 1–4. Google Scholar
Pooley JD (2016) James W. Carey and Communication Research: Reputation at the University’s Margins. New York: Peter Lang. Google Scholar
Reeves, B, Borgman, CL (1983) A bibliometric evaluation of core journals in communication research. Human Communication Research 10(1): 119136. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Rice, RE, Borgman, CL, Reeves, B (1988) Citation networks of communication journals, 1977–1985: Cliques and positions, citations made and citations received. Human Communication Research 15(2): 256283. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Schramm, WL (1963) Communication research in the United States. In: Schramm, WL (ed.) The Science of Human Communication, New York: Basic Books, pp. 116. Google Scholar
So, CY (1988) Citation patterns of core communication journals: An assessment of the developmental status of communication. Human Communication Research 15(2): 236255. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI
Tunstall, J (1983) The trouble with U.S. communication research. Journal of Communication 33(3): 9295. Google Scholar
Whitley, R (1984) The Intellectual and Social Organization of the Sciences, New York: Clarendon Press. Google Scholar
Yan, E, Ding, Y, Cronin, B (2013) A bird’s-eye view of scientific trading: Dependency relations among fields of science. Journal of Informetrics 7(2): 249264. Google Scholar, Crossref, ISI

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