S3E02 - On Counternarratives
Sep 30, 2019 ·
18m 32s
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Description
Last season, I talked about how narrative, as a construct, can represent either the full story of an organization or an intervention into it. But unfortunately, the organization’s own narrative...
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Last season, I talked about how narrative, as a construct, can represent either the full story of an organization or an intervention into it. But unfortunately, the organization’s own narrative is not the only version of the story. In a competitive world, other actors use counternarratives against the organization – alternative stories that are often adversarial, intended to harm the organization’s reputation or tarnish its images. Popular communication literature plays this image up… a lot. But is it accurate? Are all counternarrative adversarial, or used only by our enemies?
Counternarratives are narratives that exist primarily to “refute other narratives” harbored by organizations, societies, nations, or any other collective group. They often emerge as “stories … which offer resistance, either implicitly or explicitly, to dominant cultural narratives.” But while counternarratives are often viewed or discussed as adversarial entities, they can take many forms as I demonstrate in the analysis of a prominent military case study — the initial phases of establishing the U.S. Africa Command by the U.S. Department of Defense, 2006-2009. Some counternarratives were purely antagonistic, but other emerged from friendlier sources. The contrasts among the counternarratives at play should make us rethink the breadth of competitive stories used to challenge the mission, purpose, or identity of organizations.
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Counternarratives are narratives that exist primarily to “refute other narratives” harbored by organizations, societies, nations, or any other collective group. They often emerge as “stories … which offer resistance, either implicitly or explicitly, to dominant cultural narratives.” But while counternarratives are often viewed or discussed as adversarial entities, they can take many forms as I demonstrate in the analysis of a prominent military case study — the initial phases of establishing the U.S. Africa Command by the U.S. Department of Defense, 2006-2009. Some counternarratives were purely antagonistic, but other emerged from friendlier sources. The contrasts among the counternarratives at play should make us rethink the breadth of competitive stories used to challenge the mission, purpose, or identity of organizations.
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