Tamara: Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry
Corporate life and the imagination: The place of unconscious processes in the world of business
University of Western Sydney
Abstract
The question giving shape to this paper is: Can the workplace in today's corporate world ever be constructed, legitimately, as a psychological place? This paper will argue that it is the responsibility of the individual to engage their imaginative processes and learn the art of soul making. The corporation may encourage its members to be creative and imaginative but mostly its activities will militate against these activities. Reference will be made to a research project for a major production site (BP Oil Australia) that evaluated an espoused psychological goal (improved production and improved creativity) as its outcome. The author conducted the evaluation of this leadership development initiative that shed light on the vexed question that is the focus of this paper. The findings of the research indicate that corporate life has evolved into a totally above-world enterprise where transparency of decision making, policy planning, and implementation is the sought-after ideal. This very conscious and heroic-ego world roots out any semblance of under-world (unconscious) forces.
Keywords
Metadata
Journal | Tamara: Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry |
Volume | 6 |
Issue | 1 |
Issue date | 2007 |
Type | Article |
Language | en |
Pagination | 58-64 |
ISSN | 1532-5555 |
Copyright info
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