Ernest G. Bormann (born July, 28 1925, North Dakota, United States—died December 22, 2008, Minneapolis, Minnesota) was an American communication theorist best known as the originator of symbolic convergence theory (SCT) and its attendant method, fantasy theme analysis, which both explore how the sharing of narratives or “fantasies” can create and sustain group consciousness. For Bormann, these communal narratives encouraged group cohesion and fostered the development of a shared social reality among group members. While Bormann’s initial conception of symbolic convergence stemmed from his research of small group communication, he argued that group consciousness can occur at any level of communication, from within small groups to mass media. Thus, he identified symbolic convergence as a general theory of communication.
Bormann was a World War II veteran. In 1949 he received a bachelor’s degree from the University of South Dakota, graduating magna cum laude. By 1953 he had received both a master’s and a doctorate from the University of Iowa. For the next six years, he taught briefly at the University of South Dakota, at Eastern Illinois University, and at Florida State University. In 1959 he began a long and distinguished career (1959–2008) in the Department of Speech Communication of the University of Minnesota.
Bormann served as president of the Central States Communication Association as well as director of Graduate Studies at the University of Minnesota. He also served as an associate editor for the Central States Speech Journal, Communication Monographs, and the Quarterly Journal of Speech. He received several awards, including honours for outstanding teaching, scholarship, service, and mentoring.
Throughout his career, Bormann wrote numerous scholarly articles, including several that sought to clarify and even defend symbolic convergence theory since its inception in 1972. In a 1994 publication he refuted the theory’s most persistent criticisms, namely that it borrows and needlessly relabels concepts from other theories and that its application is limited to small group communication. In 2001, along with John F. Cragan and Donald C. Shields, he published a retrospective look at the previous three decades of symbolic convergence research and development while speculating on its future applications.
Bormann applied symbolic convergence theory and fantasy theme analysis to a variety of topics and issues, such as inaugurals, campaigns, and even political cartoons. In addition, he published several books addressing a range of topics, from interpersonal and small group communication to speech communication. The Force of Fantasy (1985), for example, is an extended case study of America’s attempts to restore the American Dream from the 17th to the 19th century. Bormann was inducted into the Central States Communication Association’s Hall of Fame in 2004.