Wilbur Schramm (born August 5, 1907, Marietta, Ohio, U.S.—died December 27, 1987, Honolulu, Hawaii) was an American scholar of mass communications who played an important role in founding and shaping the discipline of communication studies.
Schramm received a B.A. from Marietta College in 1928 and an M.A. in American civilization from Harvard University in 1930. He worked as a reporter and desk editor in his early 20s. He also wrote fiction and poetry, which he continued to do throughout his life. He received a Ph.D. in American literature from the University of Iowa in 1932. He was a professor of English at the University of Iowa from 1934 to 1941. During that time, in 1935, he and Norman Foerster founded the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, which developed into one of the most prestigious creative writing programs in the United States.
After the outbreak of World War II, Schramm served for two years as director of education in the federal government’s Office of Facts and Figures and then at its Office of War Information. Schramm’s wartime research, which concerned propaganda, contributed to the deepening of his interest in the uses of mass communication as a tool for influencing public opinion.
In 1943 Schramm returned to the University of Iowa, with a new appointment as director of the school of journalism. Schramm moved to the University of Illinois in 1947, where he founded the Institute of Communications Research and served as its director. Schramm moved again in 1955, founding another communications research institute at Stanford University. After retiring from Stanford in 1973, Schramm became the director at the East-West Communication Center at the University of Hawaii.
Schramm’s research interests included audience behaviour, persuasion, propaganda, and the educational uses of mass media. Among his 25 books, his best-known works include Mass Communications (1949; 2nd ed. 1960), Process and the Effects of Mass Communication (1954), Television in the Lives of Our Children (1961), Mass Media and National Development (1964), and The Story of Human Communications: Cave Painting to the Microchip (1987).