When the Lord builds the house: An autoethnographic account of working in an evangelical for-profit organizational culture |
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Authors: | Lindsey B. Anderson |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Communication, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USAlbander@umd.edu |
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Abstract: | Religion is often perceived as a private topic, thus belonging outside the traditional conceptualization of a work environment. However, religion is a pervasive organizing framework and an understanding of its role in the workplace is needed from a communicative perspective. In the following autoethnography, I describe my experience working for a Christian for-profit homebuilder – starting with new employee orientation and moving through my final day at Local Homes. I focus on instances where tension emerges between expectations and reality as I learn about and interact within the overtly evangelical Christian organizational culture. The tension is illustrated through four vignettes that correspond to the traditional phases of socialization. Through writing this autoethnographic account, I attempt to move beyond my personal experience and situate my story within larger disciplinary and societal conversations about the socialization process in a religious organization. With this goal in mind, I conclude with methodological and theoretical implications. |
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Keywords: | religion autoethnography socialization organizational communication |
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