Serious Play as a Practice of Paradox
Journal
Journal of Applied Behavioral Science
ISSN
0021-8863
ISSN-Digital
1552-6879
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2011-06
Author(s)
Abstract
A recent stream of organizational research has used the term serious play to describe situations in which people engage in playful behaviors deliberately with the intention to achieve serious, work-related objectives. In this article, the authors reflect on the ambiguity of this term, and reframe serious play as a practice characterized by the paradox of intentionality (when actors engage deliberately in a fun, intrinsically motivating activity as a means to achieve a serious, extrinsically motivated work objective). This reframing not only extends the explanatory power of the concept of serious play but also helps bridge the concerns of scholars and practitioners: first, by enabling us to understand a variety of activities in organizations as serious play, which can help practitioners address specific organizational challenges; second, by recognizing the potential for emergent serious play, and the creation of the conditions to foster this emergence; third, by pointing toward specific, individual or group-level outcomes associated with the practice; and finally, by uncovering its ethical dimensions and encouraging the understanding of the role of serious play on ethical decision making.
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Sage Publishing
Publisher place
London UK
Volume
47
Number
2
Start page
236
End page
256
Pages
21
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
140910