|
Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Communication studies
|
Buy Now
Deadly Documents - Technical Communication, Organizational Discourse, and the Holocaust: Lessons from the Rhetorical Work of Everyday Texts (Paperback)
Loot Price: R2,430
Discovery Miles 24 300
|
|
|
Deadly Documents - Technical Communication, Organizational Discourse, and the Holocaust: Lessons from the Rhetorical Work of Everyday Texts (Paperback)
Series: Baywood's Technical Communications
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
Scholars, teachers, and practitioners of organizational,
professional, and technical communication and rhetoric are target
audiences for a new book that reaches across those disciplines to
explore the dynamics of the Holocaust. More than a history, the
book uses the extreme case of the Final Solution to illumine the
communicative constitution of organizations and to break new ground
on destructive organizational communication and ethics. Deadly
Documents: Technical Communication, Organizational Discourse, and
the Holocaust-Lessons from the Rhetorical Work of Everyday Texts
starts with a microcosmic look at a single Nazi bureau. Through
close rhetorical, visual, and discursive analyses of organizational
and technical documents produced by the SS Security Police
Technical Matters Group-the bureau that managed the Nazi mobile gas
van program-author Mark Ward shows how everyday texts functioned as
"boundary objects" on which competing organizational interests
could project their own interpretations and temporarily negotiate
consensus for their parts in the Final Solution. The initial
chapters of Deadly Documents provide a historical ethnography of
the SS technical bureau by closely describing the institutional and
organizational cultures in which it operated and relating
organizational stories told in postwar testimony by the
desk-murderers themselves. Then, through examination of the primary
material of their documents, Ward demonstrates how this Social
Darwinist world of competing Nazi bureaucrats deployed rhetorical
and linguistic resources to construct a social reality that
normalized genocide. Ward goes beyond the usual Weberian
bureaucratic paradigm and applies to the problem of the Holocaust
both the interpretive view that sees organizations as socially
constructed through communication and the postmodern view that
denies the notion of a preexisting social object called an
"organization" and instead situates it within larger discourses.
The concluding chapters trace how contemporary scholars of
professional communication have wrestled with the Nazi case and
developed a consensus explanation that the desk-murderers were
amoral technocrats. Though the explanation is dismissed by most
historians, it nevertheless offers, Ward argues, a comforting
distance between "us" and "them." Yet, as Ward writes, "First, we
will learn more about the dynamic role of everyday texts in
organizational processes. Second, as we see these processes-perhaps
inherent to all organized communities, including our own-at work
even in the extreme case of the SS Technical Matters Group, the
comforting distance that we now maintain between 'them' and 'us' is
necessarily diminished. And third, our newfound discomfort may open
productive spaces to revisit conventional wisdoms about the ethics
of technical and organizational communication."
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.