Manfred Rühl Explained

Manfred Rühl (born 1933 in Nuremberg) is a German communication scientist with a social science background.

Early life and education

At the age of sixteen he received a high school scholarship for Dayton, Ohio, for the 1950/51 school year. After graduating from high school (1953 in Nuremberg), he completed an apprenticeship as an industrial clerk. He became a freelance journalist for daily newspapers, magazines and radio, and studied economics and social sciences at the University of Erlangen, Free University of Berlin, and Hochschule für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften Nürnberg, where he graduated in economics in 1960. His theses topic was "Der Stürmer und sein Herausgeber" (Der Stürmer and his editor).[1] From 1960 to 1962 he was a student assistant at the "Institut für Publizistik" (Institute for Public Communication).

He served as faculty assistant at the Nürnberg Hochschule's transition to the Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg's Faculty of Economics and Social Science. From 1964 to 1968 he worked as a scientific assistant for communication science at the (new) Chair of Political and Communication Science. He received a doctorate in 1968 with his dissertation "Die Zeitungsredaktion als organisiertes soziales System" (The newsroom as an organized social system) under Franz Ronneberger.

Career

In 1969/70, Rühl was scholar-in-residence at the Annenberg School of Communications of the University of Pennsylvania. From 1970 to 1976, he was a project manager in the DFG Collaborative Research Centre 22 "Sozialisations-und Kommunikationsforschung" (Socialisation and Communication Research) at the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg. In between, from 1973 to 1974, he held the Interim Professorship for Journalistics at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. In 1976,he was appointed to the (new) Professorship of Communication Science at the University of Hohenheim, where he was responsible for the postgraduate course in journalism.

In 1978, he obtained his Habilitation, the postdoctoral lecturing qualification in Communication Science at the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg with the theses "Journalismus und Gesellschaft. Bestandsaufnahme und Theorieentwurf" (Journalism and Society. Inventory and theory draft). From 1983 to 1999, he held the (new) Chair of Communication Science at the University of Bamberg. In summer 1980 and winter 1993/94, he was visiting professor for public communication at the University of Zürich. In 1999 he became professor emeritus.

In 1963, Rühl was one of the founding members of "Deutsche Gesellschaft für Publizistik- und Kommunikationswissenschaft" (DGPuK), the German Communication Association, and since 2004 he has been one of its honorary members. From 1978 to 1982, he was Chairman and Deputy Chairman of DGPuK. In 1970 he became a member of the International Communication Association (ICA); from 1977 to 1980 he was a member of its board of directors. Since 2013, the Institute of Communication Science, Otto-Friedrich-University Bamberg, has awarded the Manfred-Rühl-Preis for outstanding Master's theses.

Manfred Rühl's research focuses are:

Based on system-theoretical ideas, Rühl works on problems of human communication systems, aiming at a general theory of communication science. In contrast to behavioral and action theorizing, communication theories enable the analysis and synthesizing of sensemaking information, thematically delimiting messages and their understanding in societal contexts. Basic assumptions of general theory of communication science can already be observed in the late 17th century. Christian Thomasius preferred self-thinking in science and everyday life when, in his 1692 "Einleitung zur Sittenlehre" (Introduction to Morality), he formulated a theory of mutual dependence of man, communication and society. In "Zeitungs Lust und Nutz" (Newspaper's pleasure and use) of 1695, Kaspar Stieler distinguishes between communicating and publishing, and he propagates newspaper reading as a necessity for the "Politicus" in a (future) bourgeois society. The Young Hegelian Robert Eduard Prutz describes in 1845 journalism and democracy as two sides of a social developmental product. Economists and social scientists Karl Knies, Albert Schäffle, Karl Bücher and Max Weber on the one hand, Charles Horton Cooley, Robert Ezra Park, Harold Dwight Lasswell and further social scientists of the Chicago School on the other hand, observe connections between communication, the publics, public opinion, railways and telegraphs, urban and organizational cultures, money, credit, time and society, on the "discovery of communication as a field of research, teaching, and professional employment" (Lasswell 1958).

Works (selection)

Publications

External links

Intermizations

Notes and References

  1. Manfred Rühl: DER STÜRMER und sein Herausgeber. Versuch einer publizistischen Analyse. Unpublished diploma thesis. Hochschule für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften Nürnberg 1960. (typewritten manuscript).