Options
Patrizia Hoyer
Former Member
Title
Dr.
Last Name
Hoyer
First name
Patrizia
Phone
+41 71 224 3925
Now showing
1 - 10 of 17
-
-
PublicationA serious matter: Clowning as an ethical care practice.(Routledge, 2019-12-06)
;Fotaki, Marianna ;Islam, GaziAntoni, AnneType: book section -
PublicationBetween critique and affirmation: An interventionist approach to entrepreneurship education(Routledge, 2018)
;Berglund, KarinVerduijn, KarenType: book section -
PublicationProbing the power of entrepreneurship discourse: an immanent critique(Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016-11-25)Type: book section
-
PublicationDiscourse analysis as intervention: a case of organizational changing(Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016-11-25)In lieu of an abstract, here a brief extract from the introduction: In recent years, researchers in management and organization studies have devoted considerable attention to discursive research, so it is hardly controversial to claim that discourse analysis is one of the field’s most popular research methodologies. At the risk of simplifying, a key assumption underlying much of the available literature is that discourse analysis is primarily an excellent tool for producing knowledge (Heracleous, 2006) and more generally an analytic mentality (Phillips and Hardy, 2002). This interpretation is noteworthy as it consigns discourse analysis to its epistemological function. Although we agree that discourse analysis is inextricably connected to questions of epistemology (knowledge), in this chapter we seek to transcend this position by demonstrating that it can also be used productively as a means of intervention. Conflating the epistemological and interventionist trajectories of discourse analysis, we build on prior work that conceives of ‘method’ and ‘research’ quite generally as a means for enacting and changing reality instead of ‘only’ representing or interpreting it (Law, 2004; Steyaert, 2011). Following this vein of thinking, we tenta- tively outline the interventionist potential of discourse analysis against the backdrop of organizational changing. Thereby, drawing on Tsoukas (2005), we define organizational changing as the process through which multiple discursive practices unfold, allowing members of organizations to give meaning to the organizational reality of which they are part. Using this approach, and analysing a consultancy project in a large German voluntary organization, we reveal how discourse analysis can be used to intervene in discursive practices that are characterized by tensions and struggle. To this end, we pinpoint how the results from one such analysis were used to break up a contracted conflict via two interrelated steps. First, discursive spaces were created that offered members of the organization an opportunity to vent their frustration and to create awareness of the antagonistic discursive practices that triggered the tensions and conflict. Second, generative dialogue allowed them to foster more affirmative re-interpretations of organizational changing.Type: book section
-
Publication
-
PublicationCareer change: The Role of Transition Narratives in Alternative Identity ConstructionsThis chapter addresses the question of why some people may be more successful than others at creating an alternative identity in the course of a career change. Taking a narrative perspective, the author draws particular attention to a variety of transition narratives which function as legitimizing resources for people to distance themselves from previous self-concepts, while at the same time allowing them to experiment with new sources of meaning and to create alternative identities. The analysis, of how former management consultants narrated the story of their career shift, focuses on four particular transition narratives(re-invention, alteration, re-enactment and stagnation) which help to account for some of the variation observed in career change experiences. The analysis also reveals a good indicator of how successful speakers will be in achieving alternative identity constructions in a new work environment: the radicalness of the career change and the contextual resources those speakers can call on to tell more or less compelling transition narratives. Thus we see that choices around a career change are dynamic and relational, as they are socially constructed in dialogue with others.
-
Publication
-
Publication
-
Publication