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	<title>Zorn, Theodore E. and Nikki Townsley</title>	<link>http://tc.eserver.org/authors/Zorn,_Theodore_E._and_Nikki_Townsley</link>
	<description>A bibliography of works by Zorn, Theodore E. and Nikki Townsley in the field of technical communication.</description>
	<language>en-us</language>
	<copyright>Copyright (c) 2005-08 by the EServer. All rights reserved.</copyright>
	<managingEditor>tclib-editorial@eserver.org (TC Library Editorial Board)</managingEditor>
	<webMaster>webmaster@eserver.org (Geoffrey Sauer)</webMaster>
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		<title>Zorn, Theodore E. and Nikki Townsley</title>
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		<title>Introduction to the Forum on Meaning/ful Work Studies in Organizational Communication</title>
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		<description>On&#xD;the first day of Nikki&apos;s undergraduate seminar, Organizing Work, she Oasks&#xD;students to list the idioms and phrases commonly used to make sense of the &apos;work&apos; experience. She shares the example of her father repeat- edly using the phrase &apos;daily&#xD;grind&apos; when she was growing up (important to note, he was not referring&#xD;to the ubiquitous Starbucks of today). Slowly but surely, the chalkboard fills&#xD;with an array of idiomatic expressions: &apos;on the clock,&apos; &apos;work&#xD;like a dog,&apos; &apos;all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy,&apos; &apos;work&#xD;your fingers to the bone,&apos; &apos;all in a day&apos;s work,&apos; and a&#xD;host of others, including the Marxian favorite, &apos;a fair day&apos;s pay for&#xD;a fair day&apos;s work.&apos; Students are asked to reflect on the meanings embedded&#xD;within the list and how language constitutes cultural meanings and values&#xD;of work. As such an exercise should make abundantly clear, work and meaning&#xD;would seem to be central to our study of organizational communication. Our&#xD;talk about work both embodies and structures individual and social under-&#xD;standings, attitudes, and actions. Yet, the meanings associated with work&#xD;and the notion of work as meaningful have not been foci of study within our&#xD;dis- cipline. Indeed, the term work is not even indexed in the New Handbook&#xD;of Organizational Communication (Jablin and Putnam, 2001), and a search&#xD;of the EBSCO database found not a single article with work and either meaning&#xD;or meaningful in the title in a communication journal. Given contemporary&#xD;devel- opments that make work more central to people&apos;s lives as well as less&#xD;secure, the question of what work means to people and how such meanings contribute&#xD;to or detract from a sense of purpose or dignity in people&apos;s lives is important&#xD;to consider.</description>
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