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Portrait of the Manager as a Young Author: On Storytelling, Business, and Literature: Volume 12

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Portrait of the Manager as a Young Author: On Storytelling, Business, and Literature: Volume 12

Contributors:

By (Author) Philipp Schnthaler
Translated by Amanda DeMarco

ISBN:

9780262535748

Publisher:

MIT Press Ltd

Imprint:

MIT Press

Publication Date:

18th September 2018

UK Publication Date:

28th September 2018

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Fiction companions
Corporate governance: role and responsibilities of boards and directors

Dewey:

833.92

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

144

Dimensions:

Width 114mm, Height 178mm, Spine 11mm

Description

What happens to the relationship between business and literature when storytelling becomes a privileged form of communication for organizations.Corporations love a good story. Microsoft employs a chief storyteller, who heads a team of twenty-five corporate storytellers. IBM, Coca-Cola, and the World Bank are among other organizations that have worked with storytelling methods. And, of course, Steve Jobs was famous for his storytelling. Today, narrative is a privileged form of communication for organizations. In Portrait of the Manager as a Young Author, Philipp Sch nthaler explains this unlikely alliance between business and storytelling. The contradictions are immediately apparent. If, as the philosopher Hans Blumenberg writes, stories are told to pass the time, managers would seem to have little time to spare. And yet, Sch nthaler reports, stories are useful in handling complexity. When digital information flows too quickly and exceeds the capacity of the human brain, narrative can provide communicative efficiency and effectiveness. Words and numbers both vouch for truth, are both instrumentalized by management, and are inextricably interdependent. What happens, if narrative becomes ubiquitous Does the commercialization of narratives have an effect on literature Through the lens of storytelling, Sch nthaler explores the relationship between economics and literature and describes a form of writing that takes place in their shared spheres. Most books on storytelling in the corporate world are written by business writers; this book offers the perspective of an award-winning literary author, who considers both the impact of storytelling on business and the impact of business on literature.

Author Bio

Philipp Schnthaler, a Stuttgart-born writer, is the author of Nach oben ist das Leben offen, winner of the 2012 Clemens Brentano Prize. The German edition of Portrait of the Manager as a Young Author was awarded the Stuttgart Business Club Prize in 2016.

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