
Developing the Political Perspective on Technological Change Through Rhetorical Analysis
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0893318908318514
access restricted (by the publisher) to members/subscribers/customers only
peer-reviewed
Symon, Gillian
Management Communication Quarterly
2008
Abstract:
Rhetorical analysis provides
a means through which a political perspective on technological change can
be developed at a micro-discursive level. Through the analysis of managers'
arguments and counterarguments, this article identifies three rhetorical strategies
that negotiate the relationship between the technical and the social: attributing
the effects of technology; claiming convergent and divergent interests; and
constructing identities for self, groups, and the technology. It argues that
a rhetorical approach maintains space for agency on the behalf of employees
(through the witcraft of argument) and analytical skepticism concerning the
reality of technology properties and effects (through counterargument). In
addition, it proposes the concept of the argumentative context as a means
of bridging the gap between individual and organizational rhetoric.