Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10256002 | Public Relations Review | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
From a postmodernist perspective, it is possible to see crisis as a disruption in the dominant narrative that members of an organization's power elite wish to perpetuate. The crisis itself often evolves into a multiplicity of competing narratives. Much standard advice given by crisis communication experts-such as to tell the truth, choose a single spokesperson, and establish a crisis command center to regain control of the crisis-sounds suspiciously like the self-protecting actions favored by the power elite within the organization. A postmodernist approach might instead favor mitigation of suffering, attention to dissent, and a polyvocal organizational response.
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Authors
Lisa Tyler,