Identity Work: Processes and Dynamics of Identity Formations

Abstract Our aim is to elucidate a position that takes identity to be dynamic and changeable over time and to propose a conceptualization that provides a way of mapping alternative imperatives and opportunities for identity work. It is argued that dynamic identity is inherently complex, being constructed through interaction between the self and others. These interactive activities are conceptualised as “identity work”.[1] We regard an understanding of identity work to be significant both for the theorizing of identity and for those who work and manage in organizations, particularly where the organisational situation is itself dynamic.

[1]  J. Pfeffer,et al.  Putting people first for organizational success , 1999 .

[2]  Patrick A. Tissington,et al.  Should I Stay or Should I Go? Explaining Turnover Intentions with Organizational Identification and Job Satisfaction , 2004 .

[3]  G. Aronsson,et al.  Permanent employment but not in a preferred occupation: psychological and medical aspects, research implications. , 1999, Journal of occupational health psychology.

[4]  D. Boje,et al.  Language and Organization: The Doing of Discourse , 2004 .

[5]  M. Alvesson Talking in Organizations: Managing Identity and Impressions in an Advertising Agency , 1994 .

[6]  Christine Coupland,et al.  Accounting For Change: A Discourse Analysis of Graduate Trainees' Talk of Adjustment , 2001 .

[7]  S. Fineman Constructing the Green Manager , 1997 .

[8]  Brian E. Becker,et al.  STRATEGIC HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN FIVE LEADING FIRMS , 1999 .

[9]  B. Israel,et al.  Detroit's East Side Village Health Worker Partnership: Community-Based Lay Health Advisor Intervention in an Urban Area , 1998, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.

[10]  M. Feldman Organizational Routines as a Source of Continuous Change , 2000 .

[11]  Like A Virgin: Temptation, Resistance, and the Construction of Identities Based on “Not Doings” , 2001 .

[12]  Kimberly D. Elsbach,et al.  Defining Who You Are By What You're Not: Organizational Disidentification and The National Rifle Association , 2001 .

[13]  Wanda J. Orlikowski,et al.  Improvising Organizational Transformation Over Time: A Situated Change Perspective , 1996, Inf. Syst. Res..

[14]  Robert Cheng Huat Chia A 'Rhizomic' Model of Organizational Change and Transformation: Perspective from a Metaphysics of Change , 1999 .

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

[16]  Paul Wheeler,et al.  Losing The Plot , 1998 .

[17]  M. Alvesson,et al.  Identity regulation as organizational control: Producing the appropriate individual , 2002 .

[18]  K. Gaston,et al.  Effective organisation and management of public sector volunteer workers: Police Special Constables , 2001 .

[19]  Robert Chia,et al.  On Organizational Becoming: Rethinking Organizational Change , 2002, Organ. Sci..

[20]  D. Jacobson,et al.  Job Insecurity: Coping with Jobs at Risk , 1991 .

[21]  Barbara Czarniawska Narrating the Organization: Dramas of Institutional Identity , 1997 .

[22]  Majken Schultz,et al.  The Dynamics of Organizational Identity , 2002 .

[23]  T. Abel,et al.  Mind, Self, and Society , 1934 .

[24]  Michael A. West,et al.  Managing people and performance: an evidence based framework applied to health service organizations , 2004 .

[25]  T. Watson Strategists and Strategy-Making: Strategic Exchange and the Shaping of Individual Lives and Organizational Futures , 2003 .

[26]  Anat Rafaeli,et al.  Organizational Dress as a Symbol of Multilayered Social Identities , 1997 .

[27]  K. Legge Human Resource Management: Rhetorics and Realities , 1995 .

[28]  Mark A. Huselid The Impact of Human Resource Management Practices on Turnover, Productivity, and Corporate Financial Performance , 1995 .

[29]  Maureen A. Scully,et al.  Songs of Ourselves , 2000 .

[30]  C. Huxham,et al.  Cycles of Identity Formation in Interorganizational Collaborations , 2003 .

[31]  Dennis A. Gioia,et al.  Identity, Image, and Issue Interpretation: Sensemaking during Strategic Change in Academia. , 1996 .

[32]  Tom Postmes,et al.  More than a Metaphor: Organizational Identity Makes Organizational Life Possible , 2003 .

[33]  S. Turnbull Corporate Ideology – Meanings and Contradictions for Middle Managers , 2001 .

[34]  Fred A. Mael,et al.  Social identity theory and the organization , 1989 .

[35]  D. Guest Flexible Employment Contracts, the Psychological Contract and Employee Outcomes: An Analysis and Review of the Evidence , 2004 .

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

[37]  J. Sillince,et al.  ‘A Rounded Picture is What We Need’: Rhetorical Strategies, Arguments, and the Negotiation of Change in a UK Hospital Trust , 2004 .

[38]  P. Berger,et al.  The Social Construction of Reality , 1966 .

[39]  Angela Trethewey,et al.  Disciplined Bodies: Women's Embodied Identities at Work , 1999 .

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

[41]  C. Marlene Fiol,et al.  Capitalizing on Paradox: The Role of Language in Transforming Organizational Identities , 2002, Organ. Sci..

[42]  Pierre Bourdieu,et al.  Outline of a Theory of Practice , 2020, On Violence.

[43]  Jeffrey D. Ford,et al.  Logics of Identity, Contradiction, and Attraction in Change , 1994 .

[44]  N. Jackson,et al.  For the sake of argument: towards an understanding of rhetoric as process , 2004 .