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Discourse Analysis and the Study of Organizations

  • David Grant and Rick Iedema
Published/Copyright: July 27, 2005

Abstract

In this paper we provide an overview of research into organizational discourse, making a tentative distinction between organizational discourse studies (emerging from organization and management theory) and organizational discourse analysis (emerging from more linguistic-oriented research). Our primary aim is to focus on organizational discourse studies in a fashion that complements, rather than replicates, previous overviews of the field. In so doing, we suggest that organizational discourse research is too complex and multivariate to be pigeonholed on the basis of academic discipline or research method. Further, abstracting the multiplicity of organizational discourse research endeavors into just two single dimensions as do Alvesson and Kärreman (2000), for example, runs the risk of losing some of this richness. We aim to provide insight into the complexity of organizational discourse and the philosophical and methodological richness that it embodies by highlighting that commentators often straddle dierent positions. To this end, we propose five dimensions by which to map this rich domain of research. Our concluding argument is that organizational discourse studies (ODS) and organizational discourse analysis (ODA) would do well to combine the former's normative and the latter's analytical prerogatives with attention to practitioner-situated problematics and struggles.

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Address for correspondence: Work and Organizational Studies (Rm. 511), The School of Business, The New Economics and Business Building (H 69), The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia 〈〉.
Address for correspondence: Centre for Clinical Governance Research, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, The University of New South Wales, NSW 2052, Australia 〈〉.

Published Online: 2005-07-27
Published in Print: 2005-01-01

© Walter de Gruyter

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