Dubinsky, James M.Getchell, Kristen2023-01-302023-01-302021-08-181050-6519http://hdl.handle.net/10919/113564Since 1985, the field of professional communication has grown in size and reputation while maintaining a space within its primary disciplinary home of the English department. This article relies on historical evidence to examine how a field that was once evenly divided between business communication and technical communication is now technical communication-centric, almost to the exclusion of business communication. The authors pose questions about the field of professional communication and how faculty who consider business communication to be their primary discipline (regardless of their disciplinary home) might play a role in future discussions related to disciplinarity and domains of knowledge.Pages 433-46836 page(s)application/pdfenIn Copyrightbusiness communicationprofessional communicationprofessional communication historydisciplinary definitionscurricular geographiesThe Disappearance of Business Communication From Professional Communication Programs in English DepartmentsArticle2023-01-29Journal of Business and Technical Communicationhttps://doi.org/10.1177/10506519211021466354Dubinsky, James [0000-0002-4234-4894]1552-4574