THE USES OF NARRATIVE IN ORGANIZATION RESEARCH
Abstract
A so-called literary turn in social sciences in general and in organization studies in
particular has resulted in re-discovering the narrative knowledge in organization theory
and practice. Organization researchers watching the stories being made and distributed
collect organizational stories and provoke story telling in their contacts with the field of
practice. This paper takes up the variety of ways of reading such narratives, classifying
them into the three steps delineated in the hermeneutic triad: explication, explanation,
and exploration. Explication raises the issues of interpretation and overinterpretation;
and finds different solutions in pragmatist vs. traditional hermeneutic theory of
interpretation. Explanation has a wide range of techniques and approaches to offer,
from structuralism through poststructuralism to deconstruction. Narratology is of help
also in the last stage, exploration, offering reflection concerning the construction of the
researcher's own story by genre analysis etc. The paper ends in a review of most
common attitudes towards text analysis: text as the key to the world, text-as-world, texts
in the world (science as conversation).
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2000Author
Czarniawska, Barbara
Publication type
Report
Series/Report no.
GRI reports, nr 2000:5
Language
en