Image, Imagination, Communication: Exploring the Ethical as Natural or Artificial, Real or Surreal


May 28-30, 2025 | 㽶Ƶ Power Center Ballroom

The 18th Biennial Communication Ethics conference and the Silver Jubilee Anniversary Conference (2000-2025) of the will explore current research on the “image" and "imagination," broadly conceived, across the human sciences. Our focus is on the phenomenological, semiotic, rhetorical and ethical foundations of communication in the experience of embodied thinking, speaking and inscribing. We seek to explore the frontiers of natural and artificial sign-systems, encounter diverse manifestations of concrete reality and abstract surreality of human imagination, and discover future domains of conscious experience that found the art and practice of human communicating. We welcome a diversity of scholarly and creative approaches. Problematics that presenters may consider include, but are not limited to:

  • What questions are raised by recent phenomenological, semiotic, rhetorical, and critical theories of visual and mental images, visibility and nonvisibility, presence and absence, perception and expression?
  • Is there a general theory of image ethics? If so, what are its foundations and some of its value limitations (e.g., psychoanalysis, journalism, design, propaganda)?
  • What does it mean to "see" oneself or another? What is a just distance from which to look?
  • What social, political, economic and/or ethical contradictions have emerged with new convergences among art, media, software and the communication practices they afford?
  • How is the rhetoric of visual images impacted (enhanced, limited, etc.) by networked media?
  • What does artificial intelligence want from images? What do images want from AI? What constitutes personification in/of the media?
  • In what ways do advertisers imagine consumers?
  • What pasts, presents, and futures are depicted by the visualization of digital data?
  • How can we reimagine the objectives of network and social media science? 
  • What histories of communicology and communication ethics have yet to be written? What futures can we imagine?

The domains of the image and imagination encompass all the Arts and Sciences of expression and perception. These include, the Arts of Media: speaking, writing, painting, printing, sculpture, performance, voice; the Sciences of Media: social and media ecology, film and video, photography, screen/digital and legacy media; and Technological Media of Artificial Intelligence: ubiquitous computing, robotics, holographics and applied algorithms. Communication ethics theory, research and application corresponds with and enriches our critical understanding of each domain. 

 

Keynote Speakers

Featured content

Dr. David Gunkel

Dr. David J. Gunkel

David J. Gunkel (PhD Philosophy) is an award-winning educator, researcher, and author, specializing in the philosophy of technology with a focus on the moral and legal challenges of artificial intelligence and robots. He has published over 115 scholarly articles and seventeen books, most recently Person, Thing, Robot: A Moral and Legal Ontology for the 21st Century and Beyond (MIT Press 2023), and Handbook on the Ethics of AI (Edward Elgar 2024). He currently holds the position of Presidential Research, Scholarship and Artistry Professor in the Department of Communication at Northern Illinois University (USA) and professor of applied ethics at Łazarski University in Warsaw, Poland.

Dr. Leswin Laubscher

Dr. Leswin Laubscher

Dr. Leswin Laubscher counts teaching, research, and clinical experience as a psychologist in both the United States and South Africa. He holds degrees from Northwestern University in Evanston, and the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. Recent research interests and publications have examined the intersection of culture and psychology, apartheid and psychology, and the importance of the philosophies of Jacques Derrida, Emmanuel Levinas, and Frantz Fanon for psychology.

Dr. Carlos Vidales

Dr. Carlos Vidales

Dr. Carlos Vidales is Research Professor in the Department of Social Communication Studies at the University of Guadalajara, Mexico, and coordinator of the Semiotics, Language, and Discourse Research Group of the Mexican Association of Communication Researchers. He is the author of several books, book chapters, and articles related to semiotics and communication theory.

Conference Details

For this in-person conference, we invite participants to submit completed papers or extended abstracts of 200–500 words. We also invite panel proposals of three speakers per panel.

Please include a panel title with 250-word rationale, titles and 200-word abstracts for each presentation, and contributor contact information (institutional affiliation and email).

Submissions are due via%20email by April 30, 2025. 

Wednesday May 28
 
9:00-9:15: Coffee and registration (Shepperson Suite)

9:15-9:25 (Ballroom A): Remarks from Associate Dean John Kern, 㽶Ƶ McAnulty College and Graduate School of Liberal Arts

9:30–10:45: Panel 1 (Ballroom A): Reflecting Images: Personhood, Sign, Memory

Chair: Briankle G. Chang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

“Image, Perception, and Signs of Personhood: Phenomenological Reflections on Flesh, Experience, and the Signature of the Self”
Frank J. Macke, Mercer University

“Analogs of Huxley and Orwell in the TikTok Controversy
Thaddeus D. Martin, Modesto College

“Memory as Dialogical Attention: A Communicology Model”
Richard L. Lanigan, International Communicology Institute

11:00–12:15: Concurrent Sessions

Panel 2a (Ballroom A): Just Looking: Others, Selves, and Brands

Chair: Garnet Butchart, 㽶Ƶ

“Oneself as Another: What Constitutes a Just Distance for Selfhood?”
Fadoua Loudiy, Slippery Rock University

“The Other of Programmatic Technologies: Bernard Stiegler and Mark Fisher on ‘What Makes Life Worth Living’ for PR Professionals” 
Robert Foschia, Kutztown University

“Personal Brands, Corporate Gains: The Role of Influencers and Celebrities in Corporate Brand Extension”
Andrea DiBernardo, 㽶Ƶ

Panel 2b (Ballroom B): Simulation, Technologization, and the Erosion of Sensus Communis

Chair: Erik Garrett, 㽶Ƶ

“Postmodern Journalism and a Call from Baudrillard to Go Back to Modernity” 
Andrew Connolly, 㽶Ƶ

“The Role of Social Media: An Ethical Perspective”
Yaroub Al Obaidi, 㽶Ƶ

“Exploring the Ethical Contradictions in Media and Film Concerning the Communication Practices They Afford”
Gary Hughes, 㽶Ƶ

12:30-1:30: Boxed lunches and conversation (Shepperson Suite)

1:45–3:00: Concurrent Sessions

Panel 3a (Ballroom A): Imagining Ethical Leadership Praxis

Chair: Andrew Connolly, 㽶Ƶ

"Seeing the Servant: Visualizing Trust and Ethical Authority in Leadership Praxis" 
Tricia Giannone McFadden, St. Francis University

“Ethics in the Frame: Transformational Narratives and the Construction of Leadership Culture”
Mary Elizabeth Yancosek Gamble, Saint Francis University

“Leadership Responses to Shifting Terrain of Diversity Concerns”
Linda Coleman, 㽶Ƶ/University of Pittsburgh

Panel 3b (Ballroom B): Undergraduate Scholars Panel

Chair: Alexander Fagin, Pennsylvania State University

“The Kiss of Betrayal: The Illusion and Misunderstanding of Communication in the Digital Image”
Isabela Briggs, Ave Maria University

“A Catholic Understanding of Copied Sacred Images” 
Anna Marie Austin, Ave Maria University

“Flora and Fauna: Imaging Beyond” 
Noah Perez, Ave Maria University

“Healthy Parasocial Relationships in the 21st Century”
James W. Kavanagh, Geneva College

3:15–4:45 Keynote (Ballroom A): Carlos Vidales, University of Guadalajara, "Communication and Meaning from Cybersemiotics"

5:00–5:30  (Ballroom A): International Communicology Institute Awards Ceremony

6:00–8:00 (Ballroom C): All-conference Dinner

Thursday May 29

8:30-9:00: Coffee/Breakfast Snacks (Shepperson Suite)

9:00-10:15: Concurrent Sessions

Panel 4a (Ballroom A): Contexts of Dialogic Ethics: Friendship, Leadership, and Inter/Intrafaith Engagement

Chair: Ryan McCullough, West Liberty University

“AI Friendship as a Dialogic Unity of Contraries: Extension and Disruption”
Tiffany Petricini, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College.

“Ronald C. Arnett and Dialogic Leadership: An Authentic Encounter with the Midas Touch”
Michael R. Kearney, Dordt University
Victor Grigsby, 㽶Ƶ

“The Icon, Ethics, and Interfaith Dialogue: Mediating Communion between East and West”
Natalia Tapsak, 㽶Ƶ

“Lamenting Hope Within African American Hymnody” 
Richard W. Wingfield, 㽶Ƶ

Panel 4b (Ballroom B): Theorizing Identity, Ecological Thought, Visual Rhetoric, and Pan-Africanism

Chair: Georgia Bedford, 㽶Ƶ

“How Race Matters in Communicating Social Identity”
Henry Anyabuoke, 㽶Ƶ

“Theorizing an Ecological Communicative Ethics of the Trail: Working the Trails VI”
Janie Harden Fritz, 㽶Ƶ

“A Triad Heritage: A Rhetorical Analysis of Pan-Africanism”
Samuel Edogbanya, 㽶Ƶ

10:30-11:45: Concurrent Sessions

Panel 5a (Ballroom A): Ethics, Politics, and Education Today

Chair: Janie Harden Fritz, 㽶Ƶ

“Liberty and Liberalism: American Politics and Ethics at the Point of Exhaustion”
David Impellizzeri, Regent University

“Imagining the Concrete Universal: Cosmopolitan Borders in Benhabib’s Democratic Theory”
Basak M. Guven, 㽶Ƶ

“Crisis Rhetoric of ‘Efficiency’ in Education: A Merger—Technocrats, Oligarchs, ‘Captains of Industry,’ and the State in Late Capitalism" Georgie Bedford, 㽶Ƶ

Panel 5b (Ballroom B): Reflections on Power, Media, and Image(s)

Chair: Andrew R. Smith, PennWest University, Edinboro

“The Digital Übermensch: The Will to Power, Master-Slave Mentality, and Living a Life”
Andri Kosasih, 㽶Ƶ

“McLuhan, the Narcissus Myth, and AI”
Jennifer Spiegel, 㽶Ƶ

“The Image of the Inevitable”
Justin Bonanno, Ave Maria University

“Dissecting the Impact of YouTube 20 Years Later”
Fr. Lazarus Langbiir, 㽶Ƶ

12:00–1:30: Luncheon Keynote (Ballroom C): David Gunkel, Northern Illinois University, "Person, Thing, Robot: A Moral and Legal Ontology for the 21st Century and Beyond"

1:45–3:00: Panel 6 (Ballroom A): Phenomenology and Dialogue: Application and Reconstruction

Chair: Briankle G. Chang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

“Application of Merleau-Ponty’s Philosophy in a Phenomenological Nursing Study of Patients, Family Members, and Nurses During Critical Illness in the Intensive Care Unit”
Brigitte S. Cypress, Rutgers University

“Dialogue, Dissemination, and Semiosis: Toward a Pragmatic Reconstruction”
Vincent Colapietro, Liberal Arts Professor Emeritus, Penn State University, Center for the Humanities, University of Rhode Island

3:15-4:45: Panel 7 (Ballroom A): Ethics of the Real

Chair: Fr. Lazarus Langbiir, 㽶Ƶ

“Ethics of Asserting the Real: Production Artifacts and the Uncanny Valley in Artificial Images
Michael Grabowski, Manhattan University

“Reality, Imagination, Research, and Communication: An Epistemological Synthesis of 
Karl Popper’s Three Worlds and the Methodological Issues in Research”
Qinjiang Yao, Lamar University

“Re-imagining Money: Bitcoin and the 21st Century”
Rachel Kaplan, Seton Hill University

5:00–6:15: Panel 8 (Ballroom A): Contributions of Thomas Pace to Research and Pedagogy in Communicology

Chair: Richard L. Lanigan, International Communicology Institute

“Thomas Pace and the Recovery of the Human in Communication”
Isaac E. Catt, Visiting Scholar, 㽶Ƶ

“Seeding the Existential Soil of Scholarship”
Jacqueline M. Martinez, Arizona State University

“The Flesh of Speech and the Experience of Communication in the Life and Voice of  Tom Pace”
Frank J. Macke, Mercer University

"Speech as Human Science and Rhetorical Art"
Andrew R. Smith, PennWest University, Edinboro

“Cyphers of Existenz in the Legacy of Thomas J. Pace”
Thaddeus D. Martin, Modesto College

“Tom Pace as an Event of Speaking: Discovering with Tom that the Map is Not the Territory”
Deborah Eicher-Catt, Professor Emerita of Communication Arts and Sciences, Liberal Arts Teaching Fellow, The Pennsylvania State University

Dinner on your own

Friday May 30

8:30-9:15: Coffee, breakfast snacks, and conversation (Shepperson Suite)

9:15-10:30: Panel 9 (Ballroom B): Ethical Praxis in Educational Contexts

Chair: Basak Guven, 㽶Ƶ

“Who Knows? Teaching Response-Ability as Epistemological Discernment in GenAI-Assisted Business Communication”
Beth Walter, Carnegie Mellon University

“Artificial Intelligence and Higher Education: Destabilized Images, Roles, and Ethics”
Ryan McCullough, West Liberty University

“The Improvisational Classroom: Embodied Pedagogical Praxis”
Anthony Luchini, 㽶Ƶ

10:45-12:00 Panel 10 (Ballroom B): The Human Image in Helmuth Plessner, Pierre Bourdieu, and Psychocentric Culture

Chair: Richard L. Lanigan, International Communicology Institute

“The Human Image Reimagined”
Igor Klyukanov, Eastern Washington University

“Toward a ‘New Logic of Embodied Mind:’ A Commentary on Isaac Catt’s The Human Image in Helmuth Plessner, Pierre Bourdieu, and Psychocentric Culture”
Jacqueline M. Martinez, Arizona State University

“Communicability and Faith in The Human Image in Helmuth Plessner, Pierre Bourdieu, and Psychocentric Culture “
Thaddeus D. Martin, Modesto College

“Reflections on the Human Imago and How We Semiotically Invent Our Reflections in and Through It”
Frank J. Macke, Mercer University

Respondent: Isaac E. Catt, Visiting Scholar, 㽶Ƶ

12:15-1:45: Luncheon Keynote (Ballroom C): Leswin Laubscher, 㽶Ƶ, "Some Stories about Soulful Seeing. Or Not."

2:00-4:45: Panel 11 (Ballroom B): The Ethics of Diaspora Imagined and Lived: Film and Discussion

Part 1 (2:00-3:15): Screening of Round Eyes in the Middle Kingdom

Introduction: Richard L. Lanigan, Program Chair, International Communicology Institute

Film Précis: “Ronald Levaco, Growing Up in China”

Film Screening (1995; 53 minutes)

Part 2 (3:30-4:45): Diaspora Images and Imagination

Round Table Discussion: Living Through Multi-Lingual Diasporas-in-Contact

Chair: Richard L. Lanigan, International Communicology Institute

Richard L. Lanigan, International Communicology Institute: Growing Up in New Mexico

Michael Shapiro, Brown University: Growing Up in Japan

Igor Klyukanov, Eastern Washington University: Growing Up in Russia

Briankle G. Chang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst: Growing up in Taiwan

Conference Closing Remarks

Registration fee includes coffee all day, reception (hors d'oeuvre and wine), lunches, Friday breakfast buffet.

Faculty: $200
Graduate student: $65
Duquesne undergraduate: $0

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Located in the heart of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, 㽶Ƶ is a vibrant, private institution known for its commitment to academic excellence and social justice. 㽶Ƶ is home to the Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center, a hub for phenomenological research and scholarship, with extensive collections including the archives of prominent phenomenologists.

Contact Information

Department of Communication and Rhetorical Studies

Dr. Garnet C. Butchart