ABSTRACT

Addressing both renowned theories and standard applications, Stories of Life in the Workplace explains how stories affect human practices and organizational life. Authors Larry Browning and George H. Morris explore how we experience, interpret, and personalize narrative stories in our everyday lives, and how these communicative acts impact our social aims and interactions. In pushing the boundaries of how we perceive narrative and organization, the authors include stories that are broadly applicable across all concepts and experiences.

With a perception of narrative and its organizational application, chapters focus on areas such as pedagogy, therapy, project management, strategic planning, public communication, and organizational culture. Readers will learn to:

    • differentiate and gain an in-depth understanding of perspectives from varying narrators;
    • recognize how stories are constructed and used in organizations, and modify the stories they tell;
    • view stories as a means to promote an open exchange of creativity.

By integrating a range of theories and practices, Browning and Morris write for an audience of narrative novices and scholars alike. With a distinctive approach and original insight, Stories of Life in the Workplace shows how individuality, developing culture, and the psychology of the self are constructed with language—and how the acceptance of one’s self is accomplished by reaffirming and rearranging one’s story.

chapter 1|17 pages

Narrative Appreciation

chapter 3|21 pages

Action, Motivation, and Moral Outcome

chapter 4|20 pages

Sequence and Locale

chapter 5|20 pages

Character and Identity

chapter 6|18 pages

Interest and Memory

chapter 7|18 pages

The Beauty of Narratives in the Workplace

chapter 8|19 pages

Complexity and Control

chapter 9|15 pages

Representing Narrative Realities