Narrative, identity and change: a case study of Laskarina Holidays
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to contribute to the understanding of organizational identity through an analysis of shared identity narratives at the UK‐based specialist tour operator Laskarina Holidays.
Design/methodology/approach
Predicated on a view of organizations as linguistic constructs, it is argued that individual and collective identities are narrative accomplishments, and that organizations tend often to be characterised by identity multiplicity.
Findings
A case study is presented featuring three distinctive but interwoven collective identity narratives (which are labelled “utilitarian”, “normative” and “hedonic”), and these are contrasted with some “dissonant” voices. It is argued that change in organizations is, at least in part, constituted by alterations in people's understandings, encoded in narratives, and shared in conversations.
Originality/value
The research contribution that this paper makes is twofold. First, it makes an argument for theorizing organizational identities as narratives, constituted within discursive regimes, and continuously changing as they are created and re‐created by all participants. Second, it suggests that the narratological approach to theorizing and researching organizational identities is important because it both assists one's efforts to analyze identities as the outcomes of processes of hegemonic imposition and resistance, and allows one to read polysemy back into ethnographic research.
Keywords
Citation
Brown, A.D., Humphreys, M. and Gurney, P.M. (2005), "Narrative, identity and change: a case study of Laskarina Holidays", Journal of Organizational Change Management, Vol. 18 No. 4, pp. 312-326. https://doi.org/10.1108/09534810510607029
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited