From what to where: A setting-sensitive approach to organizational storytelling

Merlijn van Hulst*, Sierk Ybema

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Extant literature on organizational storytelling assumes storytelling to be context-bound, but does not empirically detail or theorize how storytelling might differ across organizational settings. In the context of members’ everyday work lives, organizational storytelling research tends to focus on the content of stories and not on the actual telling. By addressing this omission, this paper makes three contributions. First, we offer a generic framework for analysing storytelling in situ by zooming in on the situated occurrence of storytelling through a focus on four questions: (1) What makes an event tellable? (2) What triggers its telling? (3) What form does the storytelling take? (4) What work does it do? By using ethnographic data gathered on storytelling in everyday police work, we empirically substantiate this framework. Our second contribution, then, is to show how a setting-specific approach to studying storytelling may help to flesh out a fuller, more grounded account of story life in organizations. Finally, we propose a typology of different forms of setting-specific discourse – meeting-room talk, workstation talk, canteen talk and closed-door talk – which allows researchers to further sensitize organizational research to the situated nature of organizational discourse.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)365-391
Number of pages27
JournalOrganization Studies
Volume41
Issue number3
Early online date25 Jan 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2020

Funding

We would like to thank Senior Editor Christine Coupland and anonymous reviewers for useful guidance and constructive feedback. We also wish to thank attendants of the 2013 Ethnography Symposium held in Amsterdam, colleagues within the Organizational Sciences department at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and Leonore van den Ende and Anette Hallin, for their suggestions. This research received funding from the Dutch Police & Science foundation.

FundersFunder number
Dutch Police & Science foundation
Leonore van den Ende and Anette Hallin

    Keywords

    • context
    • discourse
    • ethnography
    • narrative
    • police
    • storytelling

    VU Research Profile

    • Governance for Society
    • Connected World

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