Multimodality
Elisa Lehrer,
Matthias Wenzel and
Eric Knight
Chapter 2.19 in Elgar Encyclopedia of Strategy as Practice, 2025, pp 177-179 from Edward Elgar Publishing
Abstract:
The term “multimodality” refers to the co-presence, combination, or effects of different modes. Yet, understandings and applications of the term, including what “modes” are, vary across disciplines. The understanding of multimodality in research on strategy as practice is largely inspired by communication studies, where communication is assumed to be always multimodal in that it unites varied modes of communicating: not only speech, which is often considered the dominant mode, but also other modes such as bodily movements, visuals, material objects and artifacts etc. Hence, from an SAP perspective, we propose to understand multimodality against the background of practice theories.
Keywords: Multimodality; Modes; Practice theories; Materiality; Communication; Embodiment (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
ISBN: 9781035315956
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