Out In The Cold: Alaskan Women‘s Use Of Supportive Communication And Support Networks

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Date
2009-10Author
Kiefer, Curtis A. "Kit"
Publisher
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Fine Arts and Communication
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Show full item recordAbstract
More than 200,000 American women live under conditions capable of
producing extreme stress through cold, darkness, and physical and cultural
isolation – in Alaska, America‘s ― "Last Frontier." Many of these women deal with
the stresses of living in Alaska by using supportive communication – a fact which
has not been examined in depth prior to this thesis. Using qualitative interview
data and a phenomenological approach, this thesis examines the ways Alaskan
women use supportive communication, the stressors which spur supportive
communication, the channels used for supportive messages, and the
characteristics of the messages directed toward certain relational groups. Based on
interviews with an extraordinarily broad cross-section of non-native Alaskan
women covering many decades and experiential backgrounds, the research
identified principal stressors as cold, darkness, physical isolation, cultural
isolation, holidays, and the presence of children and other family stresses.
Alaskan women derive the most immediate and significant support from face-to-face
interactions with immediate family present in Alaska – adults first, then
children; short of that, support is supplied by Lower-48 family, Alaskan friends,
and finally Lower-48 friends. However, support from these groups is tempered by
physical distance and an inability or unwillingness to understand the nature and
depth of stressors. Finally, face-to-face communication provides the deepest,
richest, and most immediate support; despite technological obstacles and lack of
richness, phone calls, e-mails, and letters were still capable of providing
significant support. New media such as texting and social media have made few
inroads with respondents.
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/81402Type
Thesis