
Title:
The Routledge international handbook of organizational autoethnography
Author:
Herrmann, Andrew F., 1966- editor.
ISBN:
9780429614903
9780429616112
9780429613692
9780429056987
Physical Description:
1 online resource.
Series:
Routledge international handbooks
General Note:
<P><EM>List of Figures</EM></P><P><EM>List of Tables</EM></P><P><EM>Acknowledgements</EM></P><P></P><P>Preface: Organizing a Handbook and What's Inside</P><P><EM>Andrew F. Herrmann</EM></P><P></P><B><P>Section I: Situating Organizational Autoethnography</B> </P><P></P><P>1. The Historical and Hysterical Narratives of Organization and Autoethnography</P><P><EM>Andrew F. Herrmann</EM></P><P></P><P>2. Life between Interlocking Oppressions: An Intersectional Approach to Organizational Autoethnography</P><P><EM>Helena Liu</EM></P><P></P><P>3. Autoethnography through the Prism of Foucault's Care of the Self </P><P><EM>Leah Tomkins</EM></P><P></P><P>4. Queering Organizational Research Through Autoethnography</P><P><EM>Jamie McDonald and Nick Rumens</EM></P><B><P></P></B><P>5. Postcolonial Organizational Autoethnography: Journey into Reflexivity, Erasures, and Margins</P><P><EM>Mahuya Pal, Beatriz Nieto Fernandez, and Nivethitha Ketheeswaran</EM></P><P></P><P>6. Aggression, Bullying and Mobbing in the Workplace: An Autoethnographic Exploration</P><P><EM>Mpho M. Pheko, Thabo L. Seleke, Joy Tauetsile, and Motsomi N. Marobela</EM></P><P></P><B><P>Section II: Autoethnography Across Organizational Disciplines</P></B><P>7. On Not Seeing Myself in the Research on Veterans</P><P><EM>Jeni R. Hunniecutt</EM></P><P></P><P>8. Navigating the Narrow Spaces: A Critical Autoethnography of Life in the (Postmodern) Neoliberal University</P><P><EM>Christopher N. Poulos</EM></P><P></P><P>9. Autoethnography and Information Technology</P><P><EM>Niamh Riordan</EM></P><P></P><P>10. Organizational Autoethnographies of Economy, Finance, Business and Management: Reflections and Possibilities</P><P><EM>Jeff Hearn, Karl-Erik Sveiby, and Anika Thym</EM></P><P></P><P>11. The Discomfort of Autoethnography in Academic Marketing Research</P><P><EM>Chris Hackley</EM></P><P></P><B><P>Section III: Organizations and Organizing</P></B><P>12. Billable (H)ours: Autoethnography, Ambivalence, and Academic Labor in a Healthcare Organization</P><P><EM>Nicole Defenbaugh, Jay Baglia, and Elissa Foster</EM></P><P></P><P>13. Birthing Autoethnographic Philanthropy, Healing, and Organizational Change: That Baby's Name</P><P><EM>Abby Lackey</EM></P><P></P><P>14. Organizing Desire: The Queer Bar</P><P><EM>Tony E. Adams</EM></P><P></P><P>15. Polypreneur: An Autoethnography of Owning Multiple Businesses, Simultaneously</P><P><EM>Stephanie K. Webb</EM></P><P></P><P>16. Organizational Resistance and Autoethnography</P><P><EM>Sanne Frandsen and R. Duncan M. Pelly</EM></P><B><P></P><P>Section IV: Organizing Organizational Identities</P></B><P>17. Grieving Kathy: An Interactional Autoethnography of Cultivating Sustainable Organizations</P><P><EM>Danielle M. Stern and Linda D. Manning</EM></P><P></P><P>18. Finding the "I" in Fan: Organizing Around Performed Identities within Fan Spaces</P><P><EM>Adam Tyma</EM></P><P></P><P>19. Pieced Together. Writing Invisible (Dis)abilities in Academia</P><P><EM>Katrine Meldgaard Kjær and Noortje van Amsterdam</EM></P><P></P><P>20. "Switch Off the Headwork!": Everyday Organizational Crossings in Identity Transformations from Academic to Distance Runner</P><P><EM>Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson and John Hockey</EM></P><P></P><P>21. An Autoethnographic Account of (Pre)Retirement Socialization: Examining Anticipatory Messages About Workforce Exit</P><P><EM>Lindsey B. Anderson</EM></P><P></P><P>22. Walking Home: An Autoethnography of Hiking, Cultural Identity, and (De)colonization</P><P><EM>Phiona Stanley</EM></P><B><P></P><P>Section V: Writing and Evaluating Organizational Autoethnography</P></B><P></P><P>23. Learning through the Process: Failure, Frustration and Forward Movement in Autoethnography</P><P><EM>Katherine Denker, Kayla Rausch, and Savaughn Williams</EM> </P><P></P><P>24. The IRB's Stone Wall: Rollercoaster of Doom</P><P><EM>Thomas W. Townsend, Angela Duggins, Brandon Bragg, Tess McCoy, Juliette Guerrault, Jessica Newell, and Hannah Tiberi</EM></P><P></P><P>25. Anchoring the Big Tent: How Organizational Autoethnography Exemplifies and Stretches Notions of Qualitative Quality</P><P><EM>Cary J. S. López and Sarah J. Tracy</EM></P><P></P><P>26. Towards a Model of Collaborative Organizational Autoethnography: The More the Merrier?</P><P><EM>Sally Sambrook and Clair Doloriert</EM></P><P></P><P>27. Autoethnographic Data as Abductive Experiences </P><P><EM>Wafa Said Mosleh</EM></P><P></P><B><P>Section VI: Organizing the Future of Organizational Autoethnography </P></B><P></P><P>28. Framing Stories from the Academic Margins: Documentary as Qualitative Inquiry and Critical Community Engagement</P><P><EM>Brian Johnston</EM></P><P></P><P>29. Time and the Writing of Personal Narratives in Organizational Ethnography</P><P><EM>Mette Gislev Kjærsgaard and Henry Larson</EM></P><P></P><P>30. Organizing Autoethnography on the Internet: Models and Challenges</P><P><EM>Maha Bali</EM></P><P></P><P>31. A CCO Perspective on Autoethnography: Researching, Organizing and Constituting</P><P><EM>Frédérik Matte and Geneviève Boivin</EM></P><P></P><P>32. Conclusion: Organizing the Future of Organizational Autoethnography</P><P><EM>Andrew F. Herrmann</EM></P><P></P><P> </P>
Added Author:
Electronic Access:
Taylor & Francis https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9780429056987OCLC metadata license agreement http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/oclc/forms/terms/vbrl-201703.pdf
Copies:
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Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Shelf Number | Status | Item Holds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | E-Book | 550642-1001 | GN450.8 .R68 2020 | Searching... | Searching... |
