Reconceptualising vulnerability and its value for managerial identity and learning

Dominant, masculinised constructions of managerial identities are associated with expectations of being in control and strong, and not with vulnerability. Managers may conceal vulnerability and protect themselves through defensive identity work, and such responses may close down learning opportunities. We reconceptualise vulnerability and recognise its value for managerial identity and learning by drawing upon Butler’s theory of vulnerability. Analysing interviews with middle and senior managers and presenting our own reflexive learning, we address a lack of empirical accounts of managerial vulnerability. We offer three processes of relational vulnerability: (1) recognising and claiming vulnerability, (2) developing social support to share vulnerability with trusted others, and (3) recognising alternative ways of conceptualising and responding to vulnerability. Rather than defensiveness in the face of vulnerability constructed as weakness, the value of vulnerability lies in its openness and its generative capacity for alternative ways of managerial being and learning.

[1]  Ghislain Deslandes Weak Theology and Organization Studies , 2018, Organization Studies.

[2]  D. Knights,et al.  Practice makes perfect? Skillful performances in veterinary work , 2018 .

[3]  Nicola Beech Identity at Work: An Enquiry‐Based Approach to Therapeutically Inspired Management , 2017 .

[4]  K. Kenny Healthcare and Compassion: Towards an Awareness of Intersubjective Vulnerability Comment on "Why and How Is Compassion Necessary to Provide Good Quality Healthcare?". , 2015, International journal of health policy and management.

[5]  A. Hay,et al.  ‘I don’t know what I am doing!’: Surfacing struggles of managerial identity work , 2014 .

[6]  D. Knights,et al.  It’s a Bittersweet Symphony, this Life: Fragile Academic Selves and Insecure Identities at Work , 2014 .

[7]  S. Corlett,et al.  Participant learning in and through research as reflexive dialogue: Being ‘struck’ and the effects of recall , 2013 .

[8]  Brené Brown,et al.  Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead , 2012 .

[9]  D. Knights,et al.  A labour of love? Academics in business schools , 2012 .

[10]  S. Corlett,et al.  Conversational identity work in everyday interaction , 2012 .

[11]  A. Cunliffe,et al.  Relational leadership , 2011 .

[12]  Jennifer Louise Petriglieri,et al.  Under Threat: Responses to and the Consequences of Threats to Individuals' Identities , 2011 .

[13]  R. Warhurst Managers’ practice and managers’ learning as identity formation: Reassessing the MBA contribution , 2011 .

[14]  Vanessa May,et al.  What is Narrative Analysis , 2010 .

[15]  Gianpiero Petriglieri,et al.  Identity Workspaces: The Case of Business Schools , 2010 .

[16]  M. Pratt From the Editors: For the Lack of a Boilerplate: Tips on Writing Up (and Reviewing) Qualitative Research , 2009 .

[17]  J. Butler Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? , 2009 .

[18]  S. Corlett Professionals becoming managers : personal predicaments, vulnerability and identity work , 2009 .

[19]  Andrew D. Brown,et al.  `Being Regimented': Aspiration, Discipline and Identity Work in the British Parachute Regiment , 2009 .

[20]  Tom Keenoy,et al.  Articulating identities , 2009 .

[21]  Ann L. Cunliffe,et al.  Orientations to Social Constructionism: Relationally Responsive Social Constructionism and its Implications for Knowledge and Learning , 2008 .

[22]  P. Harrison Corporeal Remains: Vulnerability, Proximity, and Living on after the End of the World , 2008 .

[23]  T. Watson,et al.  Managing Identity: Identity Work, Personal Predicaments and Structural Circumstances , 2008 .

[24]  Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik,et al.  Intensive Remedial Identity Work: Responses to Workplace Bullying Trauma and Stigmatization , 2008 .

[25]  Cynthia Hardy,et al.  Positioning, similarity and difference: Narratives of individual and organizational identities in an Australian university , 2007 .

[26]  Jim Kitay,et al.  From prophets to profits: The occupational rhetoric of management consultants , 2007 .

[27]  A. Sinclair Teaching Leadership Critically to MBAs , 2007 .

[28]  R. Simpson Masculinity and Management Education: Feminizing the MBA , 2006 .

[29]  J. Storey,et al.  Living with enterprise in an enterprise economy: Freelance and contract workers in the media , 2005 .

[30]  J. Elliott Using Narrative in Social Research , 2005 .

[31]  J. Elliott Using narrative in social research: qualitative and quantitative approaches , 2005 .

[32]  Martin Parker Becoming Manager , 2004 .

[33]  J. Butler Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence , 2004 .

[34]  David Sims,et al.  Between the Millstones: A Narrative Account of the Vulnerability of Middle Managers’ Storying , 2003 .

[35]  Mats Alvesson,et al.  Managing Managerial Identities: Organizational Fragmentation, Discourse and Identity Struggle , 2003 .

[36]  David L. Collinson,et al.  Identities and Insecurities: Selves at Work , 2003 .

[37]  Jill Stauffer Peace Is Resistance to the Terrible Satisfactions of War: An Interview with Judith Butler , 2003 .

[38]  S. Mavin,et al.  Women Learning to Become Managers: Learning to Fit in or to Play a Different Game? , 2003 .

[39]  T. Watson Ethical Choice in Managerial Work: The Scope for Moral Choices in an Ethically Irrational World , 2003 .

[40]  J. Butler Violence, Mourning, Politics , 2003 .

[41]  Alison Linstead,et al.  Losing the Plot? Middle Managers and Identity , 2002 .

[42]  David Coghlan,et al.  Management Lives: Power and Identity in Work Organizations , 2000 .

[43]  Gail K. Sergenian,et al.  Transforming the Class into a Learning Organization , 2000 .

[44]  Yiannis Gabriel Storytelling In Organizations , 2000 .

[45]  Yiannis Gabriel,et al.  Storytelling in Organizations: Facts, Fictions, and Fantasies , 2000 .

[46]  Pauline Harris,et al.  The Emergent Manager , 1999 .

[47]  David Knights,et al.  Managing Masculinity in Contemporary Organizational Life: A Managerial Project , 1998 .

[48]  N. Raab Becoming an Expert in Not Knowing , 1997 .

[49]  E. Guba,et al.  Naturalistic inquiry: Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 1985, 416 pp., $25.00 (Cloth) , 1985 .

[50]  J. C. Flanagan Psychological Bulletin THE CRITICAL INCIDENT TECHNIQUE , 2022 .