Organizational Communication: A Critical IntroductionSAGE Publications, 2018 M11 29 - 480 páginas While traditional in its coverage of the major research traditions that have developed over the past 100 years, Organizational Communication is the first textbook in the field that is written from a critical perspective while providing a comprehensive survey of theory and research in organizational communication. Extensively updated and incorporating relevant current events, the Second Edition familiarizes students with the field of organizational communication—historically, conceptually, and practically—and challenges them to critically reflect on their common sense understandings of work and organizations, preparing them for participation in 21st-century organizational settings. Linking theory with practice, Dennis K. Mumby and new co-author Timothy R. Kuhn skillfully explore the significant role played by organizations and corporations in constructing our identities.
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Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 33
... Scientific Management Frederick Taylor's Principles of Scientific Management A Critical Assessment of Scientific Management Fordism and Bureaucracy Weber's Types of Authority Charismatic Authority Traditional Authority Rational–Legal ...
... management, including scientific management, bureaucracy, human relations theory, and human resource management A new chapter on “Post-Fordism and Organizational Communication,” including discussions of the rise of the gig economy ...
... scientific management (developed by Fredrick Taylor) and bureaucracy (developed as a universal set of organizing principles by German sociologist Max Weber). We will discuss these two developments in Chapter 3, but together they had a ...
... management in the context of relations of power and resistance fits well with how we think about work and ... scientific study of systems of representation as semiology (today, the term semiotics is most used to describe this area ...
... scientific management, bureaucratic theory, human relations theory, and human resource management. Each of these theories had a significant effect on the management of the dominant institution of the 20th century—the Fordist ...
Contenido
RationalLegal Authority | |
Organizations as Communication Systems | |
PostFordism and Organizational Communication | |
Power and Resistance at Work | |
Communicating Gender at Work | |
Leadership Communication in the New Workplace | |
Information and Communication Technologies inat Work | |
Responsibility | |
Communication Meaningful Work and Personal Identity | |
Dramaturgical Selves | |
Conclusion | |
Glossary | |
Index | |