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Full Description
Despite a substantial body of work arguing for a new form of writing about management, organisations, workers, ourselves, and our lives, these calls are ironically made within the traditional scientific language. This volume of Dialogues in Critical Management Studies makes an important effort to facilitate the growth of a nascent movement to write differently and thus capitalise on the fruitful and creative margins which this opens up.
Writing Differently is a critical, insightful, poetic and timely collection of essays, poems, plays and auto-ethnographic pieces that showcases the potential of academic writing. These texts reflect how writing is not always something we control or have agency over, demonstrate the multiple ways of expressions that are possible when we write about that which matters and exhibit the rich and varied forms of writing that emerge in the processes of being involved in scholarly work.
The volume will be of interest to those interested in alternative ways of working, researching, thinking, organizing, writing research and research lives.
Contents
Chapter 1. Introducing; Alison Pullen, Jenny Helin, Nancy Harding Chapter 2. Feminist Writing in a Gendered Transnational World: Women on the Move?; Banu Ozkazanc-Pan
Chapter 3. On the Fringe/At the Fringe: Fleshing out Research; Caroline Clarke, Sandra Corlett, Charlotte, Gilmore
Chapter 4. Tractor Dad: From story to a scientific text, and back; Cecilia Bjursell
Chapter 5. Annotation; Deborah N. Brewis, Sarah Taylor Silverwood
Chapter 6. Breaking with the masculine reckoning: An open letter to the Critical Management Studies Academy; Katie Beavan
Chapter 7. When fiction meets theory: Writing with voice, resonance, and an open end; Maria Grafström, Anna Jonsson
Chapter 8. Writing past and present classed and gendered selves; Marjana Johansson, Sally Jones
Chapter 9. From Ethnography to Critical Management Studies: Facing the Street Performers' Dilemmas; Marta Połeć
Chapter 10. The political poetics of Mycelium; Mycelium
Chapter 11. On silence and speaking out about sexual violence. An exploration through poetry; Noortje van Amsterdam
Chapter 12. (Re)imagining the activist academy; Ozan Alakavukar
Chapter 13. Researching through experiencing aesthetic moments: 'Sensory slowness' as my methodological strength; Suvi Satama