ABSTRACT

Origins and Traditions of Organizational Communication provides a sophisticated overview of the fundamentals of organizational communication as a field of study, examining the field’s foundations and providing an assessment of the field to date, explaining and demonstrating a communicational approach to the study of organization.

It provides a set of literature reviews on focused topics written by experts in each area, and links organizational communication theory and research to practice. In reviewing foundational management theory, the book analyzes how early to mid-20th-century management theories shaped contemporary organizations, providing students both with background knowledge of these foundational theories and an understanding of their influence on our thinking and our organizational world.

Written at an accessible level for early graduate students, yet still sophisticated enough for doctoral students, the book is ideal for students and teachers of organizational communication and communication history.

Downloadable ancillary materials include chapter PowerPoints and a set of instructors' materials containing chapter abstracts, glossaries, discussion questions, annotated supplementary readings lists, and practitioners' corners. Please visit www.routledge.com/9781138570313.

part I|2 pages

Organizational Communication History

part II|2 pages

Foundational Organizational Theory

chapter 5|17 pages

Classical Management Theory

chapter 6|22 pages

Human Relations Theory

part III|2 pages

Topics in Theory and Research

chapter 8|19 pages

Socialization

chapter 9|19 pages

Communication Networks

chapter 10|20 pages

Workplace Relationships

chapter 11|21 pages

Identity and Identification

chapter 12|22 pages

Power and Resistance

chapter 13|20 pages

Gender and Feminist Theory

chapter 14|18 pages

Difference and Intersectionality

chapter 16|20 pages

Conflict

chapter 21|18 pages

Organizational Change