ABSTRACT

Understanding experience at work, especially in toxic organizations, is a multidimensional undertaking that must include all senses. The use of applied poetry has its primary value as an evocative approach to sensing, knowing, and understanding workplace experience. Poetry at its best condenses into relatively few words, metaphors, and images what conventional social science narratives would take much longer to articulate. Where poetry often hints and alludes, narrative seeks to spell out, expound, and complete. Where poetry leaves much mental space for the listener or reader to fill in with one’s imagination, narrative fills in the spaces with rich detail. Applied poetry and its contextual stories offer a way of accessing workplace experience that is unique and valuable in terms of understanding lives at work. The use of complementary psychodynamic theories, like all theories, is a way of trying to account for what we have found and experienced and in particular why it happened. "Why," the authors suggest, is critical in terms of understanding the sensing, images, and metaphors evoked by the poetry and stories that may resonate with hearers and readers for reasons that are unconscious and are rooted in the past. These transferences that come forward from life experience into the present are the critical data we work with. These are the data of psychoanalysis. This book both widens and deepens the scope of organizational research offered by other researchers, theorists, and approaches to understanding, interpreting, explaining, leading, and consulting with workplace organizations. Its triangulating integration of applied poetry, experience and stories behind the poetry, and the three psychoanalytic models of explaining life in workplaces, is a new and distinct contribution to organizational research, leadership, and consulting efforts to help organization members solve real, underlying problems and not offer simplistic, formulaic solutions based solely on a study of the organization’s surface. It will be of interest to researchers, academics, and students in the fields of organizational studies, leadership, and management.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

Applied Poetry and Storytelling

chapter 3|18 pages

Understanding Psychoanalytic Theory

chapter 4|34 pages

Leaders and Followers in the Workplace

chapter 5|20 pages

Downsizing the Workplace

chapter 6|17 pages

Alienation and Bureaucracy at Work

chapter 7|19 pages

Loss of Self

Disappeared Into Anonymity

chapter 8|25 pages

Conflict at Work

chapter 9|23 pages

Life at Work in Hospitals and Clinics

Modern Medicine and Us

chapter 10|16 pages

Meetings at Work

chapter 11|15 pages

The Psychogeography of Work

chapter 12|30 pages

Playing with Perspective

The Workplace on the Stage

chapter 13|7 pages

In Conclusion

Knowing and Feeling in the Workplace