自我民族志与学术身份:窥见商学院的双重人格

Autoethnography and academic identity: glimpsing business school doppelgängers

ORGANIZATION · 2011
被引 216 · 同刊同年前 8%
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

通过两位学者对学术会议的双重自我民族志叙述,揭示当代学术身份中必然存在的分裂感,并展示自我民族志如何为组织身份研究提供新素材和非常规方法。

Abstract

Throughout our adult lives we have both been haunted by a certain sense of doubleness—a feeling of dislocation, of being in the wrong place, of playing a role. Inspired by Stevenson’s novel Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde we explore this doubleness through evocative, dual, autoethnographic accounts of academic conferences. By analysing our stories in an iterative process of writing, reading, rewriting and rereading, we seek to extend the reach of much recent autoethnographic research. Presenting ourselves as objects of research, we show how, for us, contemporary academic identity is problematic in that it necessarily involves being (at least) ‘both’ Jekyll and Hyde. In providing readings of our stories, we show how autoethnography can make two contributions to the study of identity in organizations. The first is that autoethnographic accounts may provide scholars with new forms of empirical material—case studies in identity work. The second contribution highlights the value of experimenting with unorthodox approaches—such as explicitly using novels and other literary sources to study identity.

自我民族志学术身份组织研究定性研究方法