Humor in organization: From function to resistance
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Robert I. Westwood
Robert Westwood is Professor of Management at the Southern Cross Business School, Southern Cross University Australia. His research focuses principally on the nexus of language, power and identity. Recent publications include Westwood, R. I. and Rhodes, C. (eds.)Humour, Work and Organisation (Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2007).und Allanah Johnston
Alannah Johnston is Research Fellow at Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University. She has a PhD from the University of Queensland. She is currently researching organizational ambidexterity and its relationship to identity and culture. Her previous research has examined emotions and emotional labour, service work, gender, identity, humor in organizations and, more recently, organizational branding.
Abstract
The paper discusses the current state of research and thinking about humor in organizations and the workplace. Perhaps constrained by rationalist assumptions and conceptions of work and organization as domains of the serious, humor in organizations has received relatively little attention in management and organization studies. Such relative neglect notwithstanding, there has been a steady stream of work over the last 50 years, increasing somewhat latterly. The paper reflects, firstly, on this neglect in the face of the pervasiveness and significance of humor in life and in organizations. Next it considers more orthodox, functionalist research on humor in organizations, noting that this is the dominant stream of work. Whilst of value, this work offers a limited and partial perspective: we therefore address alternative, non-functionalist approaches that have emerged latterly, some of which take us towards a more radical view of humor in the workplace as resistance and subversion. This work is a caution against adopting a narrow functionalist view of humor and its appropriation for a managerialist agenda. In this critical evaluation of the literature humor is shown to be heterogeneous, both in its forms and effects and there is a need of better theorization that acknowledges that and which properly contextualizes humor in relation to the specific dynamics and complexities of work and organizations.
About the authors
Robert Westwood is Professor of Management at the Southern Cross Business School, Southern Cross University Australia. His research focuses principally on the nexus of language, power and identity. Recent publications include Westwood, R. I. and Rhodes, C. (eds.) Humour, Work and Organisation (Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2007).
Alannah Johnston is Research Fellow at Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University. She has a PhD from the University of Queensland. She is currently researching organizational ambidexterity and its relationship to identity and culture. Her previous research has examined emotions and emotional labour, service work, gender, identity, humor in organizations and, more recently, organizational branding.
©[2013] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Strategies of verbal irony in visual satire: Reading The New Yorker's “Politics of Fear” cover
- Humor in organization: From function to resistance
- The impact of disparaging humor content on the funniness of political jokes
- The role of social context in the interpretation of sexist humor
- Development of a Humor Styles Questionnaire for children
- The effect of joke-origin-induced expectancy on cognitive humor
- Humor styles as a predictor of satisfaction within sport teams
- Humor styles, optimism, and their relationships with distress among undergraduates in three Chinese cities
- Unveiling the humor mind of the “starving Armenians”: Literary and internet humor
- Book Review
- Book Review
- Reviewer Acknowledgement
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Strategies of verbal irony in visual satire: Reading The New Yorker's “Politics of Fear” cover
- Humor in organization: From function to resistance
- The impact of disparaging humor content on the funniness of political jokes
- The role of social context in the interpretation of sexist humor
- Development of a Humor Styles Questionnaire for children
- The effect of joke-origin-induced expectancy on cognitive humor
- Humor styles as a predictor of satisfaction within sport teams
- Humor styles, optimism, and their relationships with distress among undergraduates in three Chinese cities
- Unveiling the humor mind of the “starving Armenians”: Literary and internet humor
- Book Review
- Book Review
- Reviewer Acknowledgement