Western
              Crolina University

HOW TO CITE THIS ESSAY: David Boje & Grace Ann Rosile: Restorying the Future of Business Schools

website https://davidboje.com/wcu

Click Here to go directly to Gold Mine Cases using the 6 B's of Antenarrative

PART I Climate Change Storytelling, the Panel on Nov 5 2019 at WCU


Welcome to the College of Business

GO TO ICEBERG IMAGE NOW



What is Storytelling relation to Climate Change?
This is what Climate Change Looks Like on the coast!

What does climate change look like along a coastline?

Figure 1 North Carolina, outlawed climate change in 2012[1]

 

SLIDES FOR BOJE's Climate Change the Business of Water panel Nov 5 2019

“I think this is a brilliant solution,” comedian Stephen Colbert said, “If your science gives you a result that you don’t like, pass a law saying the result is illegal. Problem solved” (IBID.).


Talk to the undergrads at Climate Change meeting of
            Sustainability and Environment series

Talk to the undergrads at Climate Change meeting of Sustainability and Environment series at Western Carolina University on Nov 5 2019

PART II: The Ecological Turn in Business Modeling Nov 7 presentation to the College of Business for Answerable Ethics of Business College

Business Modeling is making an Ecological Turn that has everything to do with water.


The Global Water Cycle is not replenishing freshwater fast enough to keep up with agribusiness and industrial business production of goods and services being created for global consumption. The Global Water Cycle is now 40% behind, which is why the rivers, lakes, and the aquifers are running dry. This is leading to more ‘Day Zero’ events, when cities run out of tap water.  38% of all ocean life has disappeared in just the last 40 years. By 2050 there will be more plastic in the ocean than fish. The statistics tell a story of a crisis now well underway.

       By 2025 UN predicts 66% of world’s people will live in countries with high water stress & about 25% of people will be living in countries or regions with absolute water scarcity

       Unsafe water kills 200 children every hour

       Water intensified industry, including some large bottled water companies, paid for a study showing demand for water will outstrip supply in the world by 40%

       More than 60,000 chemicals are used in the US, but only 91 contaminants are currently being regulated by the Safe Drinking Water Act; no chemicals have been added to that list since 2000

       National Resource Defense Council did 4-year test of 103 bottled water, & found that 1/3rd contained bacteria & other chemicals exceeding industry standards

       1/3 what the world spends on bottled water in one year could pay for projects providing water to everyone in need

       There is an estimated 326 million trillion gallons of water on earth, but less than 1% of water can be used as drinking water

       Water covers 70.9% of Earth’s surface of which 97% is saltwater, but only 0.03% is freshwater

       68.7% of the freshwater on Earth is trapped in glaciers, and inaccessible

       30% of freshwater is in the ground, but much of it too deep to pump to surface

       Agriculture accounts for about 70% of global freshwater withdrawals (up to 90% in some fast-growing economies).

       About 6,800 gallons of water is required to grow a day's food for a family of four

       Water makes up about 66% of the human body; 70% of the human brain


[1] WUNC.org “The State That 'Outlawed Climate Change' Accepts Latest Sea-Level Rise Report”, by Dave Dewitt, 4 May 2015, accessed 30 Oct 2019 at https://www.wunc.org/post/state-outlawed-climate-change-accepts-latest-sea-level-rise-report

President Trump formally told the United Nations that the U.S. would be withdrawing from the global climate agreement, leaving diplomats to plan a way forward without the world’s largest economy.


Chris O'Leary
Chris O'Leary, former 10 years of Active Duty at U.S. Marine Corps (1989-2000)

(About half people who support Trump) are people who feel the government has let them down, the economy has let them down, nobody cares about them, nobody worries about what happens to their lives and their futures; and they're just desperate for change. It doesn't really even matter where it comes from. They don't buy everything he says, but — he seems to hold out some hope that their lives will be different. They won't wake up and see their jobs disappear, lose a kid to heroin, feel like they're in a dead-end.”

Is it possible for the Business School to adopt an Ecological Approach to Business Modeling?


This is the Organic Combusiont Systems
                    Invention
This is the Organic Combusiont Systems Invention  https://www.facebook.com/OrganicCombustionSystems/


I spent Nov 5 2019 day at Green Energy Park in Dillsboro North Carolina. I will suggest that this is an existing incubator for small business and for innovations that the Business School of WCU could begin to partner with.  Look at this amazing invention by Timm Muth and Kevin McNiff, scientist and artist working together at GREEN ENERGY PARK.


Ensemble storytelling crew meets to decide on
                    the iron and glass art to make this day.
Ensemble storytelling crew meets to decide on the iron and glass art to make this day


We used an ENSEMBLE STORYTELLING approach to developing collaboration between the blacksmith artists, the glass blowing artists, and the people from the university Sustainability Office. We called teh Native people to get permission to weave in some Cherokee story objects into the art.  The forge and gloryhole equipment was powered from methane captured from a nearby capped landfill. It is capped by a layer of clay.

Lauren Bishop and Dana Smith
Dana, Boje, and Lauren work out the the sustainability office aspects of the sculpture. Remember the Angel.

There are about a dozen Abductive Hypotheses, Boje is formulating to be studied in Inductive Tests and Deductions made in the next year as we prepare for the conference called:

Ensemble Storytelling for Art, Economics, and Environment, 2020 at WCU

We have an ensemble storytelling core of 28 people that are to be doing a 3-day conference.


Abductive Hypothesis One: This Jackson County symbol on the doors of the vehicles has an 'untold story' (Hitchin, 2015).
We want the core to do 'conversational storytelling interviews' with people-in-the-know about the hypothesized changes since 1851 in the visual storytelling of Jackson County. We love the inclusion of soil, water, minerals, trees, and climate and wonder who, when, why they came to be. Who is the angel, what does 'God's Bounty Wisely Used' mean in Jackson County, BEFORE (see six B's) and the narrative identity and language, symbols, ideologies (BENEATH), the BETS ON THE FUTURE, the BETWEEN of a county infrastructure in the spacetimemattering of this icon the names of the trees and plants, the BEYOND of a spiritual foregrasping intuitive sense, the  and the BECOMING of Care (forecare-in-advance) that is happening, emerging?

Jackson
                      County NC Angel on the County vehicles
        Jackson County NC Angel on the County vehicles

These are amazing values on the the wings of the Angels, that include the soil water minerals trees and climate,plus intelligence and beauty, education ag, industry and recreation.. With God, Bounty and Wisely Used.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS TWO: What is the Wilma Dykeman 'untold story' and how it predated what was mattering BEFORE Rachael Carson?



ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS THREE: The Roger Clapp untold story of the Tuck River clean up, and the flow data instrument (technical term apparatus) that is part of sociomateriality.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS FOUR: The Vanderbilt grandson (his name) the grandson of Cornelius, who replanted the clear cut to have a green view from his mansion, but it became a business of exporting trees to plant by other states.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS FIVE: Thom Phiubolt (Arthur Lande) story ask TOm Baker for this one, and get started on the elder's logging stories. Tom had tape recorded stories, and we can learn from the tonality of their voice, what matters then and now.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS SIX: Tom Archer, what is the D-name in Cherokee for the Storytelling Conference. How do we develop a 501c3, an action project to deal with the opioid addiction (see article to get it started).


There’s apparently more to the Cherokee word Duyvkta, which refers to walking the right path, your individually right path. It also includes “the belief that individuals have the responsibility to promote harmony, peace, balance, and kindness.”

So, unlike the neo-liberal economic liberty mantra that says the individual is only responsible for accumulating personal wealth, the Cherokee concept means that your individual path should also make the world a kinder place.

ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS SEVEN: The story of North Carolina Climate Change beginning with the event of a hurricane in the East and the forest fires prompted by drought in the west of North Carolina.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS EIGHT: Find a ranch so Grace Ann and David can do an event o equine therapy for veteran families post-deployment, and raise money for veterans dealing with opioids (see article to get this started).  Can this be action project for the "Walkers" the homeless veterans coming through NC who need a tent city, and then an entire tiny home village. This would mean involving American Legions, VFWs, the local churches (who have property to put a tent city and or tiny home village for homeless veterans there), and of course negotiations with the State.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS NINE: The core group of Ensemble Storytelling Conference, recruit theater people to help facilitate veterans doing a play about opiods, homeless veterans, and suicide.


ABDUCTIVE HYPOTHESIS TEN: Andrea Reyinos Flores has the action project of a Go Fund Me for Latinx who are being pursued by DACA (See article for more on the issue). The Go Fund Me raises money to pay for students to apply for federal paperwork for temporary visa, etc.


We will visit the Full Spectrum Farm and then return to the story of the blacksmith and glass blown art


Full
                                                          Spectrum
                                                          children can
                                                          learn to weave
                                                          a rope at the
                                                          Farm using
                                                          this device
                                                          and have fun
Full Spectrum children can learn to weave a rope at the Farm using this device and have fun

Carol West keeps the art made by each child in
                their own box at the Farm
Carol West keeps the art made by each child in their own box at the Farm

This art painted by one of the Full Spectrum
                  Children at the Farm
This art painted by one of the Full Spectrum Children at the Farm

Carol Norman David looking for some chicken eggs
Carol Norman David looking for some chicken eggs

Carol West and David BOje laughing while walking
                  in the chicken poop because its FUN
Carol West and David Boje laughing while walking in the chicken poop because its FUN

David and Carol are eating a flower in the
                  Greenhouse at the farm where kids play and learn
David and Carol are eating a flower in the Greenhouse at the farm where kids play and learn

The little air pump that keeps the two layers of
                  plastic covering inflated with air
The little air pump that keeps the two layers of plastic covering the Greenhouse at the Farm inflated with air. Lots of things for children to learn about at the farm.



Norman West and David Boje visit the PIT OF
                  DESPAIR from form PRINCESS BRIDE by WIlliam Goldman
Norman West and David Boje visit the PIT OF DESPAIR from form PRINCESS BRIDE by William Goldman's book at the Full Spectrum Farm

Norman and David strike a pose in front of the
                  Full Spectrum Farm's old wagon
Norman and David strike a pose in front of the Full Spectrum Farm's old wagon. Notice the puzzle pieces David is pointing out that are solutions to Care of Autism children, parents, and care givers.

Children can learn about Rainwater Harvestiong at
                  the Farm
Children can learn about Rainwater Harvesting at the Farm

We could not find the anvil so we are making do
                  to craft some jewelry that we think the kids could
                  make if they want to
We could not find the anvil so we are making do to craft some jewelry that we think the kids could make if they want to. Let's use this plow as an anvil and a rusty hammer, and some copper wire laying around to make some jewelry.

David makes a copper RING OF THE HEART OF CARE
                  for Carol West using Cold Forge backsmithing
                  techniques
David makes a copper RING OF THE HEART OF CARE PENDANT for Carol West using Cold Forge backsmithing techniques

David cold forging jewelry for Carol using
                  available tools at hand
David cold forging jewelry for Carol using available tools at hand. This is not at blacksmith's hammer, and this is not a forge. But it will do.

David does a HEART OF CARE RING for Carol as gift
                  fro her hospitality
David gifts a HEART OF CARE RING for Carol made to repay her hospitality

Carol West and David Boje hugging after a fun day
                  at the Full Spectrum Farm
Carol West and David Boje hugging after a fun day at the Full Spectrum Farm


Ensemble
                                                      Ranch Storytelling
                                                      Ensemble group
Ensemble Ranch Storytelling Ensemble group met Nov 7 2019 to work on their business model for health and well-being.

The Ashville meeting of potential STORYTELLING
                CONFERENCE participants
Members of the ENSEMBLE STORYTELLING CORE GROUP meet in the trees of Ashville for a scrumptious meal: Yue, Mark, Doug, Mariano, David and Grace Ann


It would cost over $1,000 a week per kiln and forge to power the equipment by propane. And by capturing the methane, it keeps the landfill capped in 1999 from polluting the water aquifer, the river, and on to the ocean.  It talkes the work of scientists to keep the methane capture system working. There are innovations happening such as the "High Temp Vegetable Oil Combustion" burner that is used for fire kilns, gloryholes, furnaces, forges, and foundries. The patent is pending, so cannot say too much about it. It fires at over 3000 degrees F. Kevin McNiff and Timm Muth are the science brains behind the innovation.



Storytelling and Business Modeling



Back to the Blacksmithing and Glassblowing Art we are making, and why its good business sense


Boje and Brock work on the iron forging using
                captured Methane

Boje and Brock work on the design of the art and how to do the iron forging using captured Methane

The ways our business models are exceeding nine planetary limits (Ripple et al., 2017) are posing more uncertainty, and moving risk beyond safe, to increasing, and high risk crises:

1.     Climate Change (in zone of uncertainty; increasing risk)

2.     Novel Entities (boundary not yet quantified)

3.     Stratospheric Ozone Depletion (below boundary states; safe risk)

4.     Atmospheric Ozone Loading (boundary not yet quantified)

5.     Ocean Acidification (below boundary states; safe risk)

6.     Biogeochemical Flows (beyond zone of uncertainty, high risk)

7.     Fresh water Use (below boundary, safe risk)

8.     Land-System Change (in zone of uncertainty; increasing risk)

9.     Biosphere Integrity (beyond zone of uncertainty, high risk)


after four hours of blacksmith the iron part of the
                art is ready
This is traditional art of scrolling, spiraling, twisting the hot iron into shape, and after four hours of blacksmith the iron part of the art is ready to hand off to glass blowing


Boje Brock and Cole made this art object with
                  best of BLACKSMITH and GLASSBLOWING Art we can do

Boje Brock and Cole made this art object with best of BLACKSMITH and GLASSBLOWING Art we can do. It's in the school colors of Western Carolina University

We still have some things to add to finish it off. You can buy it and the money will ALL be donated to the Full Spectrum Farm for kids with Autism


Business Modeling is making a Turn to storyteling the
              six Bs


Business Modeling is making an Ecological Turn that has everything to do with water.





glass art
            just out of the Kiln


Above is rehearsal for the glass to be blown into the forged iron piece of art. I am attaching a glob of molten glass to some blue chips of glass. 


working on the glass art
                      Boje and Cole use tool to twist spiral shapes into the glass art.

 

Business Modeling is making an Ecological Turn that has everything to do with water.


 Cutting the glass art piece
Boje and Cole: By tapping the iron rod with a piece of wood, the vibrations break the glass art piece just right. This is art and its science, and what we call 'material storytelling' because storytelling is not just abstracting, its grounding in the sociomateriality of everyday life. This is also an example of what our colleauges and ourselves call 'Terrestrial Ethics' and its foundational to Eco-Business Modeling, and a way to move outside of the 'status quo scenario' of what a business school is all about. This is an example of Futuring, of choosing the future, prepairing it in advance. Its good business sense.


We can used selfcorrecting storytelling science to
              change business modeling


What this is all about is using a science approach to storytelling reseach, to do the research in phases with a cycle of Abduction hypotheses, Induction tests, and develop Deduction theories.  It is called self-correcting 'storytelling science'. It is a new method, but rooted in old school philosophy of Karl Popper and Charlest Sanders Peirce. We see it also in Henri Savall's socioeconomic approach (qulimetrics, etc.) and it is taught by Professor Yue Cai at Western Carolina University.


We are rolling the glass art in a wood cup. Its hot
            glass.
We are rolling the glass art in a wood cup. Its hot glass. See the glow, it's alive.

Storytelilng is in a Place, in a Time, and its a
              spacetime to Celebrate a job well done
Storytelilng is in a Place, in a Time, and its a spacetime to Celebrate a job well done. Keep in mind this is just the practice, the rehearsal, and the main event of doing the final glass art object, is a future-not-yet, but we are confident it will happen.

BUY LOCAL IS A MORAL ANSWERABILITY IN THIS AREA

IT IS THE ECOLOGICAL BUSINESS MODELING THAT COULD BE THE BASIS OF THE BUSINESS SCHOOL]
Local food networking Guadalupe
Local food networking Guadalupe in Sylva Town NC

Its all about fair food relations with supply chain

Local Food
                  Mission

Hope is a WCU student majoring in Environmental
                  Science who tattos her arm with native plants
Faith is a WCU student majoring in Environmental Science who tattos her arm with native plants

WCU LOVES the right things
WCU LOVES the right things


What is Storytelling Research in a Business School?


One solution to the global water crisis is to engage in ‘little s’ ‘storytelling science’ that can be a challenge to ‘Big S’ ‘Storytelling Science.’   “In a nutshell, self-correcting inductive method means taking a series of repeated samples from a population, each time calculating your prediction, and then verifying the results in each successive sample.” It is about developing “fair samples." 
.
What is Storytelling? Storytelling is the whole field, which encompasses grand narratives trying to dominate our living story aliveness, while our organizing projects of the future, shine their light on different histories, and there is the pre-constitutive of all this storytelling of some important antenarrative processes.

What is the ANSWERABILITY ETHICS of the BUSINESS SCHOOL of the FUTURE?

Some Movement in the Business Modeling That Can be Basic of New Business School Strategy


Bocken, N., Boons, F., & Baldassarre, B. (2019). Sustainable business model experimentation by understanding ecologies of business models. Journal of Cleaner Production, 208, 1498-1512.

Boje, David M. 1991. The storytelling organization: A study of storytelling performance in an office-supply firm. Administrative Science Quarterly 36: 106–126.

Boje, David M. 2001. Narrative Methods for Organizational and Communication Research. London: Sage.

Boje, David M. 2008 Storytelling Organizations. London: Sage.

Boje, David M., Haley, Usha and Saylors, Rohny. 2016. Antenarratives of organizational change: The microstoria of Burger King’s storytelling in space, time and strategic context. Human Relations 69(2): 391–418.

Boons, F., & Laasch, O. (2019). Business models for sustainable development: a process perspective. Journal of Business Models, 7(1), 9-12.

Borboudaki, K. E., Paranychianakis, N. V., & Tsagarakis, K. P. (2005). Integrated wastewater management reporting at tourist areas for recycling purposes, including the case study of Hersonissos, Greece. Environmental Management, 36(4), 610-623.

O'Doherty, Damian; Statler, Matt. (2019).The Coming Crisis of Organization Studies: Gaiagraphy and New Political Imaginaries. Paper presented to Academy of Management Confererence, Boston, August.

Dentchev, N., Rauter, R., Jóhannsdóttir, L., Snihur, Y., Rosano, M., Baumgartner, R., Nyberg, T., Tangh, X., van Hoof, B., and Jonker, J. (2018), Embracing the variety of sustainable business models: A prolific field of research and a future research agenda, Journal of Cleaner Production, Vol. 194, No. 1, 695-703.


Water is life, and we are not being sensible about water. I do believe a sort of narrative madness is actually causing ‘Global Water Crisis’, the death of the Spokane King Salmon, and the extinction of the Rio Grande River Silvery Minnow and contamination of Ohio River and Cape Fear River, but a few examples. What is narrative madness of commerce? As Edward Abbey (1968/1971: 145, boldness, mine) puts it, “growth for the sake of growth is a cancerous madness”.


Drink Coke and drain world's water

Our bodies are walking climate systems (Allen, 2008). Our water body is an ecosystem, our own water ecology. Without water for 3 or 4 days, we die of dehydration.


We are
                water bodies walking climate systems

You and I are 60% to 80% water as babies swimming in our mother’s womb. Females have more water body than males. As we age we are 70% then 60% water body. Every living cell in our body is hydrated. All 37.2 trillion living cells of the human body are water logged. In fact, we humans embody a climatic system in which water is life, part of cells, blood cells, heart cells, kidney cells, skin cells, even bone cells, and just every living cell.

water book
                cover

Water Cylce image


Water Overshoot
            chart


What is
            Virtual Water of a Hamburger?



Water Apocalypse and Blue Revolution

What is virtual water to produce a car?

Business Product           Virtual Water Footprint[1]

Car                                      13,737 – 21,926 gallons

Leather Shoes                   3,626 gallons

Smart phone (mobile)     3,190 gallons

Bed Sheet (cotton)           2,839 gallons

Jeans (cotton)                   2,108 gallons

T-shirt (cotton)                 659 gallons


·      One litre of bio-diesel fuel from soybeans uses 14,000 gallons of water

·      One litre of bio-ethanol from maize uses 2,600 gallons of water

·      One litre of bio-ethanol from sugar beet uses 1,400 gallons of water

·      One litre of bio-ethanol from sugar cane uses 2,500 gallons of water

·      One car uses 39,090 gallons of water in the entire business supply chain

·      One ton of steel uses 62,000 gallons of water to produce it

·      One ton of cement uses 1,360 gallons of water to produce it

·      One cell phone uses 240 gallons of water to produce it

·      One pound of plastic uses 24 gallons of water to produce it

·      One single use plastic for water or soda uses 1.85 gallons for the plastic, and the water in has a virtual footprint that is

·      One pound of synthetic rubber uses 55 gallons of water to produce it

·      One cotton T-shirt uses 650 gallons of water to produce and transport it

·      One pair of blue jeans uses 2000 gallons of water to produce and transport it



[1] Water Footprint Calculator, accessed Dec 29 2018 at https://www.watercalculator.org/water-use/the-hidden-water-in-everyday-products/



7
            Stages of Water Apocalypse






Here is one short PowerPoint overview of HOW TO DO STORYTELLING RESEARCH?
A university is a mansion with many rooms, each with storytelling happening. You are forever chasing stories from room to room, but cannot be in more than one room at once.


TamaraLand

Boje, D. M. (1995). Stories of the storytelling organization: A postmodern analysis of Disney as “Tamara-Land”. 
Academy of Management journal, 38(4), 997-1035.


The first meaning of Ante (to ante up in gambling, in placing a wager), the 'antenarrative.'
We make bets on the future as a business, as a business school, as a university, as a nation. Those Bets on the Future (FUTURING star point #3) mean every bet has a different pathway. Let's look at Bill Sharpe's (2013) Three Horizons, giving them some new storytelling foreconcepts, of course. Sharpe, Bill. (2013). Three Horizons. Triarchy Press.


 
Three Horizons adapte from Sharpe

  • On the Red Horizon (#1) is Business-As-Usual but we know over time, our production habits and our consumer life styles will be changing quite radically. The Red Horizon (#1) is holding on to status quo, even though we are past peak water and peak oil. 
  • The Green Horizon of 'Little Wow Moments' (#3), promises a multispecies storytelling (Haraway, 2016) with a Green New Deal. and the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals actually working. The Green Horizon (#3) means lots of storytelling transformations (y-axis) will happen in time (x-axis) by the year 2130, more by 2150, if we are to avert the many extinctions of the 6th Extinction now under way (Boje, 2019a) because 'There is No Planet B' to go to to get our depleting forests, marine life, land life, clean freshwater, and so on.
  • Horizon of 'Disruptive Innovations' is happening along the dotted lines of technologies being invented to help or hinder the Red or Green horizons, as the case for enterpreneuring may be.

A second meaning of 'ante' is the Before:


What was the BEFORE (all the histories) of Western North Carolina?


The BEFORE: "In 1888, the residents of Cullowhee desired a better school for the community than was offered in public schools of that day, organized a board of trustees and established a community school that came to be known as Cullowhee Academy. Founded in August 1889 as a semi-public secondary school and chartered as Cullowhee High School in 1891 (also called Cullowhee Academy), it served the Cullowhee community and boarding students from neighboring counties and other states. The founder, Robert Lee Madison, wanted to provide an education for the young people in the region and train teachers to spread education throughout the western part of the state."

Over 4,000 Cherokee men and women died in the 1800's when President Andrew Jackson forced them to leave their homelands and relocate to Oklahoma. He had the U.S.army march them there during the cold winter months and many suffered from starvation, disease, and hypothermia. This is known as the Trail of Tears.



ethical frames





" Bakhtin (1973, p. 12) “…narrative genres are always enclosed in a solid and unshakable monological framework. ”Theoretic narrative posits mono-system-wholeness, mergedness, representational coherence, and finalizedness. His counter-move is to treat story as a dialogic; what he terms the “polyphonic manner of the story” (Bakhtin 1973, p. 60)."

Nicomachean Ethics (VIRTUE) by Aristotle on line at https://socialsciences.mcmaster.ca/econ/ugcm/3ll3/aristotle/Ethics.pdf

Kant's (1781) Critique of Pure Reason is on line and searchable (search for terms like dialectic, then spirit, then architectonic [the first systems theory of the cognitive]). Kant (Introduction) " 'Transcendental Dialectic,' which investigates the faculty of reason, in the first instance as a source of illusory arguments and metaphysical pseudo-sciences, although in the end also as the source of valuable regulative principles for the conduct of human inquiry and practical reasoning". Note this is a spirit that is external to world. What Hegel did was make Spirit in relation to world, and actually manifesting in the world as his dialectic of 'negation of the negation'. Marx rejected both Kant and Hegel, and dialectic materialism of thesis-antithesis-synthesis, as the way to reform capitalism (without spirit). See more on this after the iceberg image. GO TO ICEBERG IMAGE NOW.


Case for discussion Saturday https://amp.businessinsider.com/an-algorithm-treatment-to-white-patients-over-sicker-black-ones-2019-10?__twitter_impression=true

Basic Theory Answer: Storytelling is a combination of five forces, each a different pattern:

  1.  Antenarrating processes constituting them both even before they cohere as narratives and opposed counternarratives and/or stories and counterstories,
  2. The grand narratives Abstracting to some universal laws of Western Ways of Knowing (WWOK), Joseph Campbell's monomyth adventure narrative, Aristotle poetic narrative (example the progress myth of capitalism, the Green New Deal ...
  3. The Futuring of multiple futures, some we prepare in advance to manifest and collapse into Being of several horizons, several pathways, negating one another
  4. The living stories interrupting one another while Grounding in the Indigenous Ways of Being (IWOB), in the whole of quantum storytelling
  5. The retrospective Rehistoricizing forces of multiple histories  that illuminates, such as Nietzsche's Eternal Return, Plato's (Republic) the return of the tyrant, after oligrachy takes over form democracy that takes over from military rule


The 6 Bs of Antenarrating processes that are
                  preconstitutive of narrative and story

Detailed Theory Answer
: Storytelling is defined as the interplay and entanglement of  five forces of intersubjectivity ('you know' how most of the storytelling is untold, unwritten, unarticulated, yet is there) [Boje, 1991).

  1. First force pre-constitutive is the Antenarrating processes we call the  B's: before, beneath, bets on the future, becoming, between, and beyond (Boje, 2001, 2008, 2011; Svane, 2018); fractals within fractals.
  2. Second force is the narrative-counternarrative dialectic (thesis-antithesis-synthesis) tending towards Abstracting in dualizing various narratives-counternarratives: idealism of grand narratives like Marxism, the linguistic turn, and  western narratology of 'Western Ways of Knowing' (WWOK)  that has changed little since Aristotle's (350 BCE) narrative poetics (Boje, 2001).
  3. Third force is the dialectic (negation of the negation) pattern tending towards the Futuring of 'prospective sensemaking'  in several horizon bets on the future(Boje, 1991, 1995, 2008).
  4. Fourth forces is the living story webwork patterning, tending towards Grounding in Indigenous Ways of Knowing (Rosile, 2016), in Tamara-land (Boje, 1995) of any organization, and in Mikhail Bakhtin's (1981) dialogisms (polyphonic, stylistic, chronotopic, & architectonic of multiple discourses interanimation) [Boje, 2008), some of these in the terrestrial vibrant mattering (Bennett, 2008) of spacetimemattering (Barad, 2007).
  5. Fifth Force is  'retrospective sensemaking' (Weick, 1995) and Nietzsche's 'eternal return' pattern of  Rehistoricizing of what Donna Haraway calls the diffracting multiple histories (some that never were) selecting ones that matter to projects in the present.


You can see the dynamics of storytelling as five kinds of forces that are entangled. Here is a visual display of five forces of storytelling with Tamara-Land (Boje, 1995) in the middle, Antenarrating with the other five forces (each its own sort of multiplicity).



ABSTRACTING
Abstracting butterfly fractal narrative
                            counternarrative
Narrative-Counternarrative is a sort of Duality Fractal (splitting and trying to recombine)


REHISTORICIZING

Rehistoricizing Mandelbrot fractal
Nietzsche's Eternal Return is a sort of Mandelbrot Fractal
2. BENEATH

ANTENARRATING
1. BEFORE                           3. BETS
Tamara-Land Boje 1995
6. BEYOND                  4. BECOMING
The Tamara-Land Pattern that is pre-constituting in four directions

5. BETWEEN
FUTURING

FUTURING Julia Spiraling of several
                            horizons
Several Horizons are spiraling futures arriving and we can decide which to manifest


GROUNDING branching fractal
GROUNDING
Mostly in Indigenous Ways of Being-in-the-world, we can reconnect community to Nature


4 Wings of Tetranormalizing Fractals
The Four Wings of a Multifractal  Quantum Storytelling World We Live In

Below are the books about the five forces. Each force is a different fractal. A fractal is a repeating pattern of same dynamics across different scale. Since there are multiple kinds of forces (fractals), the term multifractal is used as a way to talk about the dyanamics of storytelling. There are narrative fractals (Abstracting), living story fractals (Grounding), spiraling fractals (Futuring) of futures (some that never were, others stuck in the past, and some arriving taking the world on new pathways), Mandelbrot fractals (Rehistoricizing) diffracting multiple histories (some that never were, others that are assembled to match new futures), and as the 6 B's theorize, there is fractal within fractals (Antenarrating) called Tamara-Land that is pre-language, pre-conscious, pre-narrative, pre-story, and pre-constitutive of the other four forces (those different sorts of multiplicities, we are calling fractal and multi-fractal).




  Tetranormalizing fractals cover
Fractal Change Management Fractal cover Emerald Handbook of Quantum Storytelling

Storytelling theories of the five forces constitutes an emerging 'storytelling paradigm. A paradigm is defined as theory and method in interventions of practice (praxis). We have put in some examples of the storytelling paradigm. There are many others we are discovering.

What is a Storytelling Paradigm?

Storytelling Paradigm BOJE and ROSILE book


What is the best storytelling article ever written.

  • Benjamin, Walter (2007/1986). The Storyteller” Reflections on the Works of Nikolai Leskov. Pp. 361-378 in Hannah Arendt (ed.) Illuminations. Translated from the German (1955) into English (1968) by Harry Zohn. NY: Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc. Storyteller essay is available online 2007, pp. 83-110 with Preface by Leon Weiseltier; Benjaminian hypothesis: ‘true’ storytelling is coming to an end, and is not just dialectical historical materialism, but rather is also the Baudelairean “multiplicity of life and the flickering grace of all the elements of life” in the “shocks and conflicts of civilization: (Benjamin, 1999/2002: 443). This “unscrupulous multiplicity” ... https://masculinisation.files.wordpress.com/2015/05/benjamin-walter-e28093-illuminations.pdf


  • Two Main books for 2019 Cabrini cohort seminar

    (written based on 2017 seminar and following seminars we developed around the world) -->Boje, D. M. (2019b). Organizational Research: Storytelling In Action. London/NY: Routledge has the ways of developing 4th wave grounded theory,
    AND

    Boje, D. M.; Rosile, G. A. (in press). How to Use Conversational Storytelling Interviews for Your Dissertation. UK: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
    Download for free until published in 2020
    which has the beginnings of a storytelling science of self-correcting 'Abduction-Induction-Deduction'.
PART II: What are some Practical Approaches to Storytelling?


There are many directions to take a storytelling dissertation. Here are seven for you to consider that have practical implications. Let's start with the 6 B's of Antenarrating (see above)




1. ANTENARRATIVE PROSPECTIVE SENSEMAKING THEORY:
You can use the 6B's
of Antenarrative.  Each B is a process and a force of multiplicity (each its own kind of fractality) in the mulitfractal. The four directions: North Star Point of ABSTRACTING, the South Star Points of GROUNDING, the West Star Points of Rehistoricizing, and the  East Star Points of FUTURING. The Antenarrative Star Points and those Compass Directions of the many Ensembles of Multiplicities, are a way to remember the processes pre-constitutive of both narrative and story.

Antenarrative 6 B's Model

Example of Antenarrative 6 B's: Expectant Parents Planning  in Advance to Have a Baby
Prgnancy
  1. BEFORE:  As expectant parents you make plans in preparation for the baby. You begin to change your life style as a couple. You move in together, maybe get married, take some classes together as parents.  Have a baby shower. Tell your parents. Choose mediacal support. PLan type of birth experience.  File for maternity leave. You are actually making a new history, a new chapter in that history.
  2. BENEATH: As a couple you begin to learn the language of parenting, and start choosing names. You notice you are speaking baby talk to the fetus. There are societal narratives of what mother and father do in parenthood. Society expects partents to marry, and before childbirth. There is a great deal of pressure for women to become mothers. Each society hasits unrealistic and idealized ways of pregnancy and motherhood. There is societal pressure for mom not to work, but to want to work. New pressures on dad to take time off for maternity care, and guilt to provide more income for growing family. There are unrealistic societal expectations for regaining shape of the body immediatley after delivery (body shaming). Society divided on whether pregnant moms can exercise, be sexy, keep working, and so on. If dad cheats, is it mom's fault? There are character roles and identities for mother and father. Its all pre-scripted narrative and it beckons you to parenthood.
  3. BETS ON THE FUTURE: You begin talking to the baby in the womb. One of you says 'be a lawyer.' The other, 'no not that, be a doctor.' There are different futures possible, and you can plan for one of them, in advance, making your bet on it. Do you share child rearing? Who works? Who gets work leave? As a couple you start to look at colleges, and what it costs for tuition.  There are bets onbreast-feeding versus bottle-feeding risks.
  4. BECOMING: You are becoming a family, within a society that expects you to exhibit an ethic of care. Different societies have different ethics of care. Is the responsibility for caring, divided equally between the parents? There are many single parents in nontraditional families. Socio-cultural expectations for expectant fathers and mothers are changing. Fathers are expected to be present in the child's life, to be involved in child-rearing.
  5. BETWEEN: Set up the infrastrcture by baby proofing the house, moving knives and chemicals out of reach, putting pantry locks in place, and those electirc outlet safety covers. Paint the room, buy a crib, bassinet. How are household tasks going to be divided between the parents?
  6. BEYOND: You have intuition. As a mother you can feel the embodiemnt, the life growing within you. But are you always 'glowing' with pregnancy, or do you have morning sickness, abdominal cramps, dizziness, bladder pressure, backaches, and fatigue? But is mothering innately intuitive to all mothers? As a father, you can put your hand on the mother's tummy, and feel the kicking and squirming. You notice the fetus reacts to sounds, to changes in mood. The mother has cravings and father runs to the store. Some body changes beyond delivery will always remain: stretch marks and surgery scars. It can take a long time to get a woman's shape back. 11 to 50% of men experience symptoms of sympathetic pregnancy. Men aan also experience hormonal changes towards the end of the pregnancy. The so-called 'cuddle chemical', oxytocin, can alo increase in new dads and this too seems to relate to paternal behavior, liklihood of playing with the child. And playing with the child and cuddling them even in the womb can increase oxytocin. Has something to do with 25% being candidates for post-natal depression.

2. Fractal Nested Loops: Our storytelling is nested. We live in stories within stories, and struggle with narratives within narratives that want to own us. The nesting of stories and narratives forms various fractals. A fractal is defined as sameness across different scalability loops. A fractal is a repeating pattern. This next example is from David Boje's living stories. We dam the rivers and wonder why there are fewer fish and why a tribe like the Spokane Indians could no longer survive. One living story interrupts another, in a storytelling of aliveness. It is one of the Grounding ways of Antenarrative processes. Of course, it has a nested way, of a family story, nested in a place (Spokane River) and nested in western colonial expansion that has a message nested about how a whole system deteriorates when you don't understand multispecies storytelling (how one specie affects another).

3. Aristotle Narrative Poetics for over two millennia has been a way to tell a western narrative, and is still a very popular way, with some initial exposition, then rising action, the climax of the plot, followed by falling action, and Denouement (explaining the movie ending to those who did not get it).  Some call this climbing the mountain, getting to its peak (the climax) and then the falling action (coming down the mountain).

Aristotle slide one 

For Aristotle (350BCE) a narrative was a matter of Abstracting a Beginning-Middle-End into a Plot, and plot was first and most important of six elements of narrative. Now a days the last element, Spectacle is most important (the fireworks and action explosions) of American movies and advertising.


Aristotle colonized by Burke


Kenneth Burke (1945) relabeled narrative into five elements by combining Aristotle's theme and rhythm into Agency.  More reductionism, and it takes us further away from any Grounding at all. Grounding is all about the wholeness of live, how the complex living systems of life are a part of our existence.



Heros Journey is an ABSTRACTING way to do reductionism
            of life forces into the simple step by step


4. Joseph Campbell's MONOMYTH OF THE Hero's Journey:
It is another example of Abstracting, of a reductionism of life forces, living stories,  and living systems into a simplified narrative structure, a circle of predictable elements. It is very popular, but beware of a part taken to be the whole of storytelling. It is a good technique to use instead of PowerPoint. Just begin with your call to adventure, pretend a refusal of the call, tell how your found a mentor, then cross the threshold to non-ordinary world, trials of doing a dissertation, find your own Boon, in the abyss of analysis paralysis, you are changed forever, then return to defend your dissertation, while wondering what is life all about.


Savall's self-correcting approach to FUTURING by
            storytelling interventions


5. Henri Savall's Socioeconomic Approach to Management (SEAM):
SEAM is an example of FUTURING, of doing the grunt work to listen to, transcribe, and code lots of stories of of Dysfunctions, Structures, Behaviors, and Hidden Costs that all need to change, if a new futuring pathway is to be find to develop a functional organization that is Grounding in a Socially Responsible Capitalism. Grace Ann and I have learned and taught SEAM approach of storytelling interventions for over twenty years. See Savall, H., & Zardet, V. (Eds.). (2011: 18-22). The qualimetrics approach: Observing the complex object. IAP. for their treatment of Abduction-Induction-Deduction in Qualimetrics (the interplay of qualitative with quantitative and financial metrics).

Ensemble Storytelling and its worker driven Corporate
            Social Responsibility


6. Ensemble Storytelling: It began with Ensemble Leadership Theory (ELT) by Rosile, Boje, & Claw (2018) in Leadership Journal, then took a turn to Ensemble Storytelling (Rosile, Boje, Sanchez, & Herder, in press 2019) in Business and Society Journal, and now we are situating it as a way of researching Worker-Driven Corporate Social Responsibility (WD-CSR).


Tamara-Land is about Rehistoricizing happening in
              storytelling


7. Tamara-Land. I went to a play called Tamara by John Kriznac, then wrote a journal article (Boje 1995) in Academy of Management Journal. There are many 'untold stories' (Hitchin, 2015) in Tamara-Land (in every organization & in every Business School).

Boje, D. M. (1995). Stories of the storytelling organization: A postmodern analysis of Disney as “Tamara-Land”. Academy of Management journal, 38(4), 997-1035.
Hitchin, Linda. (2015). Method and Story Fragments.  Pp. 213-238 in Izak, M., Hitchin, L., & Anderson, D. (Eds.) Untold stories in organizations.  London: Routledge (Taylor & Francis).

In Rehistoricizing the multiplicities of story fragments, many possible co-existing pasts are selectable in Tamara-Land.

That gives you 7 ways of doing storytelling with some visuals to help you remember them. Next we turn to using them in your dissertation.


PART III: What is 'storytelling science'?

For your dissertation research begin your research question by asking 6 B-questions of Answerability?
Antenarrative 6 B's Model


Think of the Six B's as revealing the Iceberg of Storytelling Dynamics.

  1. Before: The many histories of the iceberg as it moves through the ocean, the multiplicities of histories that Donna Haraway says are diffracting (not reflecting, but the prisms of diffraction).
  2. Beneath: The abyss of the ocean, your own psychoanalytic buried subconsciousness of dualities (gender, race, ethnicity, top and bottom, etc.) which keep splitting and trying but failing to recombine completely (resulting in the dialectics of capitalism, the thesis--antithesis-synthesis fractality), the patterns within patterns of language, symbols, ideologies, and definitely the societal, cultural, family narratives (the monomyth of Joseph Campbell, the linear narrative of Aristotle playing in every US movie theater and on the family home screen, in the Disneyfied capitalism of marketing) that recruit you to play roles you have not taken time on the couch to reflect upon what they do to self and others.
  3. Bets: The futuring of so many futures, each negating the other, in the negation of the negation, a dialectic with a different pattern than the thesis-antithesis-synthesis dialectic of dialectical historical materialism. There are bets on the negating of icebergs by climate change, and other bets how to tow an iceberg to provied water for the desert of Los Angeles.
  4. Becoming: Care and careless are both becoming, and we are attuned to each, but more the the later one.  We would like to be care-free, but that is not happening. What is the world of the Anthropocene becoming, as the iceberg melts, the sea levels rise, the coastal aquifers go all salty, the wells run dry, the temperature increases so the water vapor stays in the clouds, or downpours to flood, and weather goes out of bounds of life itself on the planet?
  5. Between: The grounding in places (spaces), times (clocktime, seasonal time, fertile time, love time, time wasted, time that stands still...), and the many things humans attach to that are mattering.  It is artificial to separate space from time, and these from mattering of things. So Karen Barad (2007) came up with the term spacetimemattering. It is a Quantum Storytelling Grounding, but lacks the spirituality that any Cabrini graduate would seek.  Are we things without spirit or do we embody spirituality in spacetimemattering, the force of Grounding that is such a part of Indigenous Ways of Being (IWOB)?  We live on icebergs, in the between-ness of spacetimemattering. So sorry to tell you the social constructivism of the Abstracting is not all there is. There is a material world, and even the stone, the mountain, the river, the water that flows, the tiny biota, is spirit in IWOB, but not so much, hardly at all, in the Western Ways of Knowing (WWOK).
  6. Beyond: So you want to go beyond? How far. Do we have an intuition, an intuitive sense of the iceberg, the depths of the ocean, the kind of massing of spiritual forces? The abyss of the ocean, our deep subconsciousness, the sensing of it that chases us. Who stares back at us in the abyss.


ICeberg of the six B's of Antenarrative with and
                without spirit

Grace Ann Rosile Movie Nahdion's Songs

WHAT IS THE RELATION BETWEEN WORLD AND SPIRIT? Please read the controversial book by Hegel (1807) Phenomenology of Spirit (this is the English in one column and German in other) translation.  Hegel went against Kant's treatment of spirit as external to world, and wrote of spirit manifesting in actual world (moving from abstract to grounding). Please search for words in Hegel like 'spirit' and 'negation' and you will understand the the controversy between Hegel and Marx's revision, and Slavoj Zizek's (2012: Less than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism) revival of a Hegelian spiritual approach to 'quantum storytelling' in opposition to Karen Barad's (2007, Meeting the Universe Halfway) spacetimemattering that is without spirit. Zizek follows Hegel in a quantum storytelling with spirit-back-in the dialectic. Indigenous Ways of Being [IWOB] (see Cajete, 2000; Rosile, 2016) are about a 'spiritual ecology' where every rock, mountain, and river is a spiritual being with rights. So on one hand is Karen Barad's posthumanism-without-spirit, and on the other hand IWOB-with-spirit, and that brings us back to Hegel [in end section of Zizek book] (for discussion of this see Boje, 2019b, Organizational Research book).  Jean-Paul Sartre (1960, Critique of Dialectical Materialism: Theory of Practical Ensembles) has the best work to date on 'multiplicity' as he also revives Hegel's by revising the 'negation of the negation' (search both terms in his book, and you will see this for yourself). Since Grace Ann and I are building a theory of practical ensembles (multiplicities, negation, and spirit-in-the-world [27 cites in the book]) this is an important book for us (well for David, anyway). Sartre: " a dialectical spirit which has long since evaporated in the hands of the various orthodoxies... narrative spirit, which tends to convert any simple expository task into a storytelling form" (Foreword to Sartre, p. xvii). Sartre's own Introduction is about the Hegel writing on the relation of Spirit and World (p. 22). In sum, can we develop a form of socially responsible capitalism that brings Spirit back into the World.

This controversy keeps playing out (https://davidboje.com/Gaia our project in Germany Apirl next year):

Latour, Bruno. (2017). Facing Gaia: Eight lectures on the new climatic regime. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.

Lovelock, James. (2009).The Vanishing Face of Gaia. Basic Books.



Next this is where the B's come from, from Heidegger (1962) Being and Time. Heidegger did not believe in the 'spirit' (though his father was a minister). Heidegger wanted to exorcise 'spirit' from Hegel's (1807) book, and reduce it to spiritless dialectic (thesis-antithesis-synthesis) dialectic. Heidegger also wanted to revise Hegel's idea of time, while keeping the 'negation of the negation' dialectic [search for term dialectic and term negation and term Hegel in Being and Time for yourself, it takes only a few minutes to sort out what is going on].



Storytelling is defined as antenarrative processes that are antecedent and pre-constitutive of narratives and stories. Thus far we have identified six antenarrative processes (Boje, 2014; Boje, Svane, & Gererich, 2016; Svane, Boje & Gergerich, 2015; Savane, 2014; Svane, 2018):

    Boje, D. M. (2014). Storytelling organizational practices: Managing in the quantum age. Routledge.

Boje, D. M., Svane, M., & Gergerich, E. (2016). Counternarrative and antenarrative inquiry in two cross-cultural contexts. European Journal of Cross-Cultural Competence and Management, 4(1), 55-84.

Svane, M. (2014). Quantum organizational world-making-through material embodied storytelling practices. In Quantum Storytelling Conference


Svane, Marita. (2018). Organizational-World Creating: Being-in-Becoming. A Quantum Relational Process Philosophy. In The Emerald Handbook of Quantum Storytelling Consulting (pp. 245-279). Emerald Publishing Limited.

Svane, M., & Boje, D.; Gergerich, Erika M. (2015). Counternarrative and Antenarrative Inquiry in Two Cross-Cultural Contexts. Accepted for publication in Special Issue on counternarrative, European Journal of Cross-Cultural Competence.

 

Svane, M., & Boje, D.; Gergerich, Erika M. (2015). Counternarrative and Antenarrative Inquiry in Two Cross-Cultural Contexts. Accepted for publication in Special Issue on counternarrative, European Journal of Cross-Cultural Competence.




PART V: For Advanced Graduate Students:
Here are some of the Martin Heidegger citations so you can read up on it on your own.
Heidegger, M. (1923/2008). Ontology--The hermeneutics of facticity. Indiana University Press.

Heidegger, M., Macquarrie, J., & Robinson, E. (1962). Being and time.



It is possible to develop a new ethical foundation for Business Schools of the future, one with a spirit of ecosacred, spiritual ecology, a relation between spirit and world (Gaia). This is our project in Germany with Kenneth and Jens and Anete (see https://davidboje.com/Gaia).



Pathway to Futuring an Ecologically Responsible Business School

Abstracting is what Western Ways of Knowing (WWOK) and Ethics do in narrating-counternarrating. Deontological ethics (Kant) is about principles that do not get practiced much. Mikhail Bakhtin (1993) critiqued bystander answerability (watching misery, having the skill and knowledge to do something, yet doing nothing at all).
Bakhtin, M. (1993). Toward a Philosophy of the Act, trans. Vadim Liapunov, 17.
Grounding in Indigenous Ways of Being (IWOB) is all about Being-in-place, Being-in-time, and Being-in-mindfulness of ecology and community.  Bakhtin's (1993: 3) moral answerability ethics is an intervention approach, rather than a bystander (watch and do nothing approach).

Futuring is about the many possible futures we can be forecaring about their Becoming. We can prepare in advance for a new business school with a different curriculum and pedagogy. Problem Based Learning (PBL) practiced in Denmark (In Aalborg University) is a different pathway. Implementing United Nations Sustainable development Goals (UN SDGs) can be a way forward in developing what Savall, Peron, Zardet, & Bonnet (2017) call 'Socially Responsible Capitalism. We have been working on Worker-Driven Corporate Social Responsibility (WD-CSR) in our study of Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) Fair Food Program and Worker-Driven monitoring of business and grower practices.  Can we move from socially irresponsible capitalism (Cai-Hillon & Boje, 2019) that is bringing about 6th Extinction from Global Heating to a socially responsible capitalism (Boje & Cai-Hillon, 2017' Ocler, Boje, & Delattre, 2016), by launching a new futuring of Business Schools?
Boje, D. M., & Cai-Hillon, Yue.  (2017). The Fifth Epoch: Socio-Economic Approach to Sustainable Capitalism. Markets, Globalization & Development Review, 2(1). Click here fore pre-press pdf

Cai-Hillon, Yue;  Boje, D. M. (2019). Socioeconomic Triple-Spiral-Helix Response to Socially Irresponsible Capitalism. In 
The Emerald Handbook of Management and Organization Inquiry (pp. 89-102). Emerald Publishing Limited.

Ocler, R., Boje, D. M., & Delattre, M. (2016). Managerial capitalism: a critical approach through the lenses of Quantum storytelling and SEAM (No. hal-01334609).

Rosile, Grace Ann; Boje, David M.; Herder, Rick; Sanchez, Rick. (2019, in press). 
 The Coalition of Immokalee Workers uses Ensemble Storytelling Processes to Overcome Enslavement in Corporate Supply Chains. This is earlier draft of article accepted by Business and Society Journal, July 2019. Click here for PDF draft version.
Savall, H., Péron, M., Zardet, V., & Bonnet, M. (2017). 
Socially responsible capitalism and management. Routledge.
Rehistoricizing in storytelling paradigm is how various future pathways select out different histories, including some pasts that never were. I began working on the Tamara-Land (Boje 1995) notion that there are many rooms in any storytelling organization (Boje, 1991, 2008) and depending on the past rooms you have been in, you experience quite different storytelling meanings of present performances in a given room.
Boje, D. M. (1991). The storytelling organization: A study of story performance in an office-supply firm. Administrative science quarterly, 106-126.
Boje, D. M. (1995). Stories of the storytelling organization: A postmodern analysis of Disney as “Tamara-Land”. 
Academy of Management journal, 38(4), 997-1035.
Boje, D. M. (2008). Storytelling organizations. Sage.
Any business school is multiple rooms, sometimes in multiple campus buildings, and you cannot be in every room at once. This is why we are looking at more shared leadership approaches in business schools, such as Ensemble Leadership Theory (ELT).
Rosile, G. A., M Boje, D., & Claw, C. M. (2018). Ensemble leadership theory: Collectivist, relational, and heterarchical roots from indigenous contexts. Leadership, 14(3), 307-328. See pre-press PDF
We are working now with Tamara-Land by integrating some self-correcting ideas of Steven Toulmin
Toulmin argumentaiton in storytelling and Exxon
                    criminality

We don't know if you heard, by New York is suing Exxon Mobil for alleged violation of criminality laws. Seems they misled investors about the risks of climate change, and how global warming by all those CO2 emissions threatens investor investments (More).



Storytelling
            Theories from Boje and Rosile doing storytelling interviews
            for your dissertation

Begin by forming your 'research question' as an Abductive hypothesis that you then do research tests of Inquiry that prompt changes in your theory Deductions. What is your Abductive-Inductive-Deductive 'storytelling science' of self-correcting in your Dissertation?




What is your Abductive-Inductive-Deductive  (AID) 'storytelling science' of self-correcting in your Dissertation? AID is a triadic from work of CHarles sanders Peirce. To see it applied in interventions of change management, see work by Henri Savall and Veronique Zardet (2011: 18-22) and this modelization of the self-correcting process (p. 108).



Begin by forming your 'research question' as an Abductive hypothesis that you then do research tests of Inquiry that prompt changes in your theory Deductions. Develop the phases of your research inquiry into your question, and refute the AID at each phase, so you have revised Abductions, new Inductions to explore, and come up with different Deductions to test with more Inductions.

Self-correcting phases with tests to improve your
            abductive propositions and your inductive tests and your
            deductive theorizing along your journey

The self-correcting phases conduct various inductive tests that realize deductive theory corrections and corrections to abductive propositions (or hypotheses). This next image is an example of self-correcting 'storytelling science' method from our three year study of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (Rosile, Boje, Sanchez, & Herder, in press 2019).
Rosile, Grace Ann; Boje, David M.’ Herder, Rick; Sanchez, Rick. (2019, in press).  The Coalition of Immokalee Workers uses Ensemble Storytelling Processes to Overcome Enslavement in Corporate Supply Chains. This is earlier draft of article accepted by Business and Society Journal, July 2019. Click here for PDF draft version.

Boje, David M.; Rosile, Grace Ann. (2019). 'Conversational Storytelling Research Methods: Cats, Dogs, and Humans in Pet Capitalism. Communication Research and Practice journal. Accepted Oct 9, 2019. Click here for pre-publication PDF.

For another example, please see

Boje, David M.; Rosile, Grace Ann. (2019). 'Conversational Storytelling Research Methods: Cats, Dogs, and Humans in Pet Capitalism. Communication Research and Practice journal. Accepted Oct 9, 2019. Click here for pre-publication PDF.
Our CIW study
            using self-correcting storytelling science phases

Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW). We began the CIW pre study with an Ensemble Leadership Theory (accepted 2016, finally in print in 2018: Rosile, Grace Ann; Boje, David M.; Claw, Carma. (2018). “Ensemble Leadership Theory: Collectivist, Relational, and Heterarchical Roots from Indigenous Contexts.” Leadership journal, Vol. 14(3) 307–328.  CLICK HERE for online prepublication draft, or here for PDF from Sage We then used self-correcting method to change the auxiliary assumptions (Trafimow, 2012) that we applied in the Inductive Tests (autoethnogrpahies, participant observation, conversational interviews, archival studies, etc.).

Trafimow, David. (2012). The role of auxiliary assumptions for the validity of manipulations and measures. Theory & Psychology, 22(4), 486-498. He shows the importance of auxiliary assumptions in theory testing. We do not test all auxiliary assumptions at once. We select some to test in each phase, learn from that, and selt new one to investigate.  It is important to try to falsify (& refute) the theories we deduce, and the abductive hypotheses we put forth. Otherwise, we are only doing verification without refutation, and that is a major inductive fallacy that plagued the first three waves of Grounded Theory.

Trafimow, David. (2017). “Implications of an initial empirical victory for the truth of the theory and additional empirical victories.” Philosophical Psychology, 30 (4): 415-437.
“A prediction is not derived solely on the basis of a theory but rather from the combination of a theory and assumptions that are not part of the theory” (Trafimow, 2017: 216).

“These assumptions are often termed auxiliary hypotheses or auxiliary assumptions. I will use auxiliary assumptions so as to include what some philosophers considered to be ‘initial conditions’ … as well as assumptions that link nonobservational terms in theories with observational terms in empirical hypotheses (e.g., Trafimow & Uhalt, 2015)” (Trafimow, 2017: 216).
As you do the AID cycles phases-by-phase, you can also address the as yet untested auxiliary assumptions.


Integration of Auxiliary Assumptions with the Abduction Induction Deduction Triadic (Image by Boje, Oct 19 2019)

Above is our adaptation of how Karl Popper advised a soon to be Nobel Prize winner on how to refute his own theory with a series of self-corrections. We have updated it with Trafiwow's work on auxiliary assumptions. Above we are combining Trafimow (2012, 2017) work on auxiliary assumptions with the Peirce (1931/196) writing on self-correcting using the Abductive-Inductive-Deductive (AID) triadic. Above the embedded triangles represent successive self-correcting AID phases of the research project. There are some auxiliary assumptions that are nonobservational terms of the deductive theories (assumption sets), and some which are part of the test (assumptions) and others that are part of the abductive hypotheses (assumptions). Above we depict the sets of auxiliary assumptions which are not yet included or investigated in successive self-correcting phases of a research project.
Next let's look at two theories (1 & 2) about three aspects of multiplicity ensembles (extensive, intensive, and virtual). The auxiliary abductions (hypotheses) and auxiliary assumptions that link nonobservational terms of deductive theories with observational terms in the inductive tests is applied here to the self-correcting Abduction-Induction-Deduction triad of C. S. Peirce. We (Rosile, Boje, Sanchez, & Herder, in press, 2019 Click here for PDF draft version.) are studying the three multiplicity ensembles of the CIW in its activations of Worker-Driven-Corporate Social Responsibility (WD-CSR).
Some auxiliary assumptions are in nonobservational terms of the two theories (1 & 2), such as, monologic of corporate narrative that it is doing CSR without CIW's Fair Food Program or the Worker Driven monitoring of working conditions (slavery, wage theft, sexual abuse) that it addresses. The counternarrative- is WD-CSR is prompting more and more consumer and faith alliance groups to pressure corporations such as Taco Bell, McDonald's, Subway, Wal-Mart, etc. to join CIW Fair Food Monitoring. The abductive hypothesis is the Extensive Multiplicity Ensembles will continue to spread locally in agricultural migrant worker alliances with faith and student groups, in a movement that globalizes to other places, other countries, and extends beyond fruits and vegetables, such as to Vermont's Ben & Jerry's Fair Food partnership.

Other auxiliary assumptions are in the abductive hypotheses that are flashes of insight that as yet, do not have inductive tests, and are as yet not worked out in the theory deductions. Notice in next figure, some auxiliary assumptions are not in either Theory 1 or Theory 2.




 This is worked out initially in Boje, D. M. (2019b). Organizational Research: Storytelling In Action. London/NY: Routledge, then made applicable to doing dissertations in Boje, D. M.; Rosile, G. A. (in press). How to Use Conversational Storytelling Interviews for Your Dissertation. UK: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd. Download for free until published in 2020

It is being applied in empirical studies: e.g. Rosile, Boje, Sanchez and Herder (in press 2019) Business and Society Journal, July 2019. Click here for PDF draft version.
"In Deleuzian ontology, the ‘virtual’ and the ‘actual’ are mutually exclusive ways of constituting the ‘real’ (Boundas, 2010: 300). There are two hybrids: Actual/Real state of affairs of bodies and bodily mixtures and individuals, and Virtual/Real incorporeal events on a plane of consistency belonging to ‘pure past’ that can never be fully present, or coincide with its actualizing (De Landa, 1999)" (Rosile et al., in press 2019).
This is an example from Rosile, Boje, Sanchez and Herder (in press 2019) Click here for PDF. In the self-correcting phases we began our pre-study with auxiliary assumptions form the accepted 2016 (Rosile, Boje & Claw, published 2018 CLICK HERE for online prepublication draft, or here for PDF from Sage,) Ensemble Leadership Theory, then in the four phases, we changed our auxiliary assumptions, by developing different theory corrections, different inductive tests, and making different abductive hypotheses along the research journey, which led to various revisions of Business and Society publication begun in 2017 and being published in 2019/2020 (Rosile, Boje, Sanchez and Herder). We were refuting our own  initial theory, changing our abductions-inductions-deductions along the way by working out various auxiliary assumptions.

self correcting with auxiliary assumptions for
            storytelling science

We are depicting the relation of Auxiliary Assumptions to test with the self-correcting Phases in the study of WD-CSR.

Storytelling theories Annotated from Boje and Rosile
            storytelling interviews for your dissertation

The Storytelling Theories are are looking at here are indicated in Blue above.

There are two quite different dialectics. This first one is Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis and the image is inspired by Hanah Arendt's work

Thesis Antithesis Synthesis inspired from Arendt
Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis: We call it D1 and its an abstracting sort of dialectic, not grounded in the real or actual. It does have its role in storytelling.  

Negation of the Negation: We call it D3 and its about the whole system, rather than the sort of reductionistic abstracting of D1.

Dialogisms: Bakhtin's (1981) essays of the four dialogisms we call D1 (polyphonic, stylistics, chronotopes, & architectonic discourses). Bakhtin wanted no part of either dialectic.

Diffracting: From Donna Haraway's (1992) work is not the mirror of narrative representation (abstracting). Rather many histories diffract, so we call it D4 and use it to make some sense out of the rehistoricizing processes.

What is interesting in storytelling theory is how these 4 D's intereact, interplay, interpenetrate one another.

Deeper theories of storytelling BOJE


The Storytelling Theory we are beginning to work out (deductively) is how four D's are entangling in the Antenarrating Processes: (D1) Dialectic of Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis that is exhibited in Narrative-Counternarrative dynamics of Abstracting.  This is a reductionist dialectic that focuses on the primary conflict but does not address Grounding in what Mikhail Bakhtin (1981) calls the four dialogisms (D2) (Boje, 2008): polyphonic, stylistics, chronotopic, and architectonic). Right to left there is a a dynamic of Futuring by a different kind of dialectic (D3): Negation of the Negation. It is prominent in Jean-Paul Sartre's (1960) Critique of Dialectical Reason: Practical Ensembles. Rather than a linear temporalizing (past-present-future) we theorize Futuring (D3) to Rehistoricizing (D4) diffracting (applying a theory by Donna Haraway).

Haraway, D. (1992). The promises of monsters: a regenerative politics for inappropriate/d others. Cultural studies, 295-337. Click Here to see pdf

"A cyborg subject position results from and leads to interruption, diffraction, reinvention" (Haraway, 1992: 333).

 Rehistoricizing Multiple pasts diffract in interference patterns of ratio(nality) making CIW WD-CSR connections (alliances, Fair Food Program partnerships) that exceed the domination of corporate hierarchical control by CIW's ensemble leadership, rather than reflect a narrative-counternarrative of stability.

" Diffraction does not produce 'the same' displaced, as reflection and refraction do. Diffraction is a mapping of interference, not of replication, reflection, or reproduction" (Haraway, 1992: 300).

Multiplicity ensembles are comprised of organic, technical, mythic, textual, and political actants and actors. Migrant communities were once family affairs, but not its mostly adults sending back earnings. The sociomaterial theory asserts a diffracting apparatus, diffracting (rehistoricizing) a past that never existed.

"But the diffracting apparatus of a monstrous artifactualism can perhaps interfere in this little family drama, reminding us that the modern world never existed and its fantastic guarantees are void" (Haraway, 1992: 303).

Haraway pushes the theory to its limits by asking this question:

" The question animating this diffracted narrative, this story based on little differences, is also simple: is there a consequential difference between a political semiotics of articulation and a political semiotics of representation?" (Haraway, 1992: 309).

Our theory is rehistoricizing of pasts that never were and pasts convenient to new or vested Futuring projects, is  enacting diffracting. In our theory terms, Haraway's project is to relocate Rehistoricizing diffracting (D4) into a Grounding of embodied meanings, dialogisms (D2).

" But I do take seriously the work to relocate, to diffract, embodied meanings as crucial work to be done in gestating a new world" (Haraway, 1992: 319).


The defracting-dialogizing in "embodied semiotic zones of earth" (Haraway, 1992: 322) anticipates Haraway's  2016 work on Staying with the Trouble, in Grounding in a multispecies storytelling, an Terrestrial Ethics for our Anthropocene situation.


Haraway, D. J. (2016). Staying with the trouble: Making kin in the Chthulucene. Duke University Press.

These antenarrative  storytelling theory(Abstracting, Futuring, Grounding, & Rehistoricizing) are resulting in a number of storytelling methods we are integrating, as shown below (there are others not shown). As our study proceeded, we began to work out methodologies with our colleagues in Denmark, France, and New Zealand.



Two books began with Grace Ann and I teaching the Cabrini doctoral seminar in Philadelphia.


Four Waves of Grounded Theory (This is an image from the Cabrini 2017 doctoral seminar

We will be working in 4th Wave GT with 10 self-correcting ontology approaches
The Boje (2019b book on storytelling research methods for 4th wave, came from the 2017 Cabrini Seminars.


Grace Ann and David worked with two amazing Cabrini students, TK (Thomas Kleiner)  and James Sibel to do self-correcting storytelling science method in their dissertation. Their work inspired us to write the book on Doing self-correcting storytelling science for your dissertation. We hope you find the two books valuable in your own work.



Ad Hoc Hypothesis testing is an inductive fallacy. It is better to write out the abductive hypotheses BEFORE the tests, so that you are not just verifying, but also doing refutation

Above is work from Karl Popper, and it is a version of self-correcting science. In A and B, there are hypotheses written out before tests (by induction), but in C and D there are 'ad hoc' posthoc hypotheses written after the fact. Popper wanted to have the hypotheses done first, then to do tests of falsification or refutation.

Charles Sanders Peirce came up with the original idea of 'self-correcting' using his abductive-inductive-deduction iterations.  Abduction is an intuitive flash of an idea, then then needs to be worked out in inductive inquiry (conversational interviews, experiments, interventions, fieldwork, etc.). Deductions of theory have various assumptions to test.

Here is an image of four zigzag steps (as Popper called them) of self-correcting (Peirce's idea).

The storytelling interventions are emerging.

We are working out storytelling interventions with our colleagues around the world.



The Interventions

We are working with several interventions of Storytelling, such as True Storytelling Principles, Socioeconomics of socially responsible capitalism, critical accounts (a way of developing metrics for the voiceless), and embodied restorying work.

  1. Extra SLIDES EXPLAINING VARIOUS POINTS of storytelling science self-correction method in global water crisis

One of the key interventions is True Storytelling. with new book by Larsen, Bruun, & Boje to be released in 2020 by Routledge

True Storytelling website
True Storytelling Principles are being used as intervention to address the 17 United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).  We also use them in conjunction with Embodied Restorying interventions using artifacts.


TRUE STORYTELLING PRINCIPLES

1.     Truth: You yourself must be true and prepare the energy and effort for a sustainable future

2.     Make room: True storytelling makes spaces respecting the stories already there

3.     Plot: You must create stories with a clear plot creating direction and help people prioritize

4.     Timing: You must have timing

5.     Help stories along: You must be able to help stories on their way and be open to experiment

6.     Staging: You must consider staging including scenography and artifacts

Reflection: You must reflect on the stories and how they create value True
                        Storytelling interventions with 17 UN SDGs
See the following as an example of this combination of interventions

Boje, D. M.; Jørgensen, Kenneth Mølbjerg; Sparre, Mogens ; Vibe, Pernille; Friis, Ole; Mølbjerg, Mikkel. (2019). “What is True Storytelling: Migrant Care in Nordic Countries” May 21-22. Slides at https://davidboje.com/truestorytelling/Skagen%20TRUE%20STORYTELLING%20May%2021%202019.pptx  YouTube 11 min at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4hCzSN4hF8

 

SOCIOECONOMIC STORYTELLING INTERVENTIONS. This is work with doctoral students we triained in New Mexico and with our colleagues in Lyon France over the past twenty plus years.


SEAM 4
                    Leaf diagnostic with root stems


The Socioeconomic Approach (SEAM) to storytelling in our work with Henri Savall in France begins with listening to stories told  in a diagnostic phase of self-correcting storytelling science. The above four-leaf clover has the key concepts for the diagnosis of dysfunctions in the script of the organization (its discourse, stories, narratives, metrics) and these scripts are fed back to the client as diagnosis, along with the particular hidden costs of having such dysfunctions, and the root cause analysis. We have our student consultants do projects of Futuring with at least three rounds of Diagnostic, Project, Implementation, & Evaluation (DPIE) cycles, that constitute an upward spiral.

hello part right part wrong
This diagram is Saunders et al the Onion, but it does not accurately present SEAM's Induction Abduction Deduction and the dialectic. The Research Onion from Chris Saunders, but its not really Socioeconomic which does use Abduction-Induction-Deduction but is not Naive Ground Theory. It is also not Mixed Method it is Qualimetrics, and there is a difference


annotated mapping of socioeconomic dysfunctions


Above is example of root cause analysis to set uf the diagnostic phase, and then to initiate a spiral intervention.


Cai-Hillon, Yue; Boje, D. M. (2019). Socioeconomic Triple-Spiral-Helix Response to Socially Irresponsible Capitalism. In The Emerald Handbook of Management and Organization Inquiry (pp. 89-102). Emerald Publishing Limited.


Spiral
            Mapping for the Intervention in storytelling self
            correcting

The root cause analysis of interplay of dysfunctions of an enterprise is pretext to doing several DPIE projects. DPIE means Diagnostic, Project Planning, Implmentation of Intervention, and Evaluation by qualimetrics (qunatiative, financial, & qualitative) storytelling..


3 DPIEs to turn
            intervention cycles into upward spiral momentum
The three DPIEs depicted above form an upward spiral of breadth and potential FUTURING, and a self-correcting cycle that becomes a spiral of momentum. This is how organization move form Business-as-Usual (BAU) pathway to new pathway direction of organizational change and development.It involves movingo from Abstracting narrative-counternarratives to collecting living stories of Grounding, and moving from BAU pathway to a Futuring that diffracts and Rehistoricizes by identifying little wow moments of potential that are untold stories of the past.

In our work training consultants we have each student consultant work with one or more of the UN SDGs in their DPIE projects with their clients.

Socioeconomic storytelling intervention in conjunction
            with UN 17 SDGs


When we teach students and consultants to do the SEAM method of self-correction, we remind them that Henri Savall and Veronique Zardet refer to Abduction-Induction-Deduction (AID) triad, and they have a process of self-correcting scientific method in their organizational development intervention work.





The Socioeconomic Approach to Socially Responsible Capitalism is a process of self-correcting, an exemplar in storytelling science intervention

See the following study guide for small business consulting applying the Socioeconomic Storytelling intervention of self-correcting storytelling science https://davidboje.com/448/448+ensembles.htm

The Higher Education Sustainability Initiative (HESI), is a partnership of UN agencies and initiatives that have teamed up to to provide a platform for Higher Education Institutions to engage and contribute to the UN Sustainable

Matthias Barth Implementing Sustainability in Higher Education: Learning in an age of transformation
(Routledge Studies in Sustainable Development) 1st Edition, 2015

Development Goals, enabling the exchange of best practices and educating future leaders on sustainable development.

All higher education institutions may join the network freely. Higher education institutions part of HESI commit to:

  1. Teach sustainable development across all disciplines of study,
  2. Encourage research and dissemination of sustainable development knowledge,
  3. Green campuses and support local sustainability efforts, and
  4. Engage and share information with international networks.

Lyon III University Jean Moulin Business School (IAE Lyon) is an exemplar in the HESI partnership implementation of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Iaelyon has been a member of PRME and the UN Global Compact since 2013. See their document online



This is the advanced version of Storytelling Paradigm, as it appears in our recent books.

STORYTELLING

PARADIGM SHIFTS

WESTERN WAYS OF KNOWING
WWOK

INDIGENOUS WAYS OF KNOWING
IWOK

 

 

 

 

THEORY

Quantum Storytelling Theory

Narrative Retrospective

Sensemaking

Narrative-Counternarrative Dialectics

 

Ensemble Leadership Theory

Antenarrative Prospective Sensemaking

2nd Wave Grounded Theory

3rd Wave

Grounded Theory

4th Wave

Grounded Theory

1st Wave Grounded Theory

 

METHOD

Self-Correcting Induction Method

 

 

Crude

Induction

 

Quantitative Induction

Qualitative Induction

Narrative Quantification

Ethno-statistics

 

Qualimetrics

Critical Accounting

Storytelling Multiplicities Analyses

 

INTERVENTION

Socio-Economic Storytelling

Critical Accounts

Appreciative Inquiry

Text-based Restorying

Embodied

Restorying Process

True Storytelling




PART VI: The Antenarrative Model for Strategic Case Analysis

Devil and Angel facilitate ethics of the Gold Mine
              Strategy Case
Devil and Angel facilitate ethics of the Gold Mine Strategy Case Nov 7 2019
Alaska Gold Mine case
As a practice exercise, you can apply the 6 B's of Antenarrating to a strategic analysis of the Alaska Gold Mine Case (Barach, 1977). After all a strategy is a story, a narrative plot.

PRE-WORK


Study the 6 B's as a way to analyze your strategy in this case



  1. Before is what we know so far as we analyze the case.  It is about history, and what we can rehistoricize (or not). There are many assumptions and conditions of uncertainty. Most of the time we feel we don't have as much information as we'd like to have. The good news is in antenarrative, we go through the analysis step by step, and we have the opportunity to shape our story by picking out different histories that are overlooked. We shape the story by finding the fragments,  diffracting them, and placing them into a story (or narrative order). This is known by the technical term, forehaving: preparing what we need, Before we have a story or narrative. A prism diffracts light into a rainbow of colors. A mirror just casts a reflection. Keep in mind as you pick some pieces you are ignoring other pieces to shape your storyline. You don't want to be ignoring different pasts, choosing a superficial past, neglecting other more important  pasts. Diffracting looks at all the pasts (including the past that never was) that are rehistoricizing as you make different futures come present. Take inventory of what you know.
  2. Beneath is about identity of the characters, the plot of the case (high risk for high reward, 'no pain, no gain, etc.). Beneath is your personality and to what you attribute success. Perhaps you are a lucky person (a gambler), or are you someone who treats life as too precious to risk for any amount of money. Beneath is about the foreconceptions (a technical term meaning the language, symbols, tropes, metaphors, notions of narrative form elements) needed in advance in order to be able to construct a narrative or story.  You can apply Aristotle's six [Abstracting] elements of narrative: (1) The plot, (2) characters, and (3) theme of the case is the Alaska Gold Rush. (4) The dialog you will need to imagine, and hear it between the lines of text (filling in the narrative). There is a (5)  rhythm of seasons, weather, timetables. There is (6) the spectacle and glitz of the journey, the adventure, the anticipation of a celebration or a disaster.
  3. Bets on the Futuring There are multiple simultaneous bets on the future being enacted in the present. We can have the foresight to make some risky or safe bets on the future. The bet you make depends on your values and the risks. What do you value?
  4. Becoming is about caring for the telf. It is care of the body. is the forecaring, the ethics of caring-in-advance, in order to bring about socially responsible enterprise. It is what Mikhail Bakhtin (1993) calls a moral answerability, you are the one person that can choose to intervene in once-occurrent eventness of Being of this situation.
  5. Between is about the grounding: the mountain, valley, and weather are also metaphors for how you approach business risk. It's about the forestructuring (a technical term) meaning the infrastructure, your supply chain, your business model of setting up a gold mine, and so on. Between is about the social and material, or if you prefer, the sociomateriality of the Situation. There is gold material, your body is material. You are in relation to mountain anf valley which influences the possible shaping of your identity, and a possible trajectory, and insight of Nature into your authentic (or true) self.
  6. Beyond is the intuitive, the pre-language of emotion, pre-discursive attunements you cannot put words to, flashes of insight and awareness, even if unarticulated. What does your gut tell you? What assumptions are you making (abductions).


PART ONE


"You have taken a three-month option on a possible gold mine in Alaska. It took you two months of dangerous journey to get there. In two weeks of exploration (and recuperation) you have regained your health, except for your injured left hand, which sometimes can become suddenly quite weak. In the last 24 hours, you have finally discovered gold in what appears to be good quantity. You have exactly two weeks to get to the claims office. If you arrive late, and attempt to secure the property (with the owners knowing you have visited it), there will probably be an auction at which you could be easily out-bid, given your limited resources. Here are your alternatives:

1.     Wait 3‑4 weeks until the weather warms up and enjoy a safe trip home.

2.     Go over the mountains. This is dangerous. It is sometimes impassable. It is quick, if you can make it without harm: 7‑10 days. If you encounter storms or injury, you will probably have to turn back or perish, as the longest part of the journey is on the way over the top.

3.     Go through the valley passes. This is less dangerous and is usually passable. It is slow and tiring. You can probably make it in 2 to 3 weeks. The weather is only moderately favorable, with what may be a mountain storm brewing. You will know if it is a storm within 48 hours, and whether the mountain is passable (if the storm comes) about one day later.

4.     Wait 2-3 days, take #2 weather permitting; if not, take #3. (There is no advantage to waiting if you prefer #3 anyway, and waiting to take #1 = #1.)

What do you do? (Circle your answer)                                   #1        #2        #3        #4" (Barach, 1977).


 

Keep in mind that a case analysis is about the quality of your arguments for a decision. It is about how you justify the choice you are making.

Make your choice: What do you do for Part I?

6
              Bs of antenarrating


Now answer the question of the 6 B's of your strategy in this case:

1. Before


2. Beneath


3. Bets


4. Becoming


5. Between


6. Beyond


When the choice is agreed upon, then and only then, read Part II.



PART TWO: ANTENARRATIVE ANALYSIS of ALASKA GOLD MINE CASE (Note this is the version of the case Grace Ann Rosile received in her MBA class).

      "Assume you chose the valley passes (#3). Five days later you are half-way there. You have pushed too hard and sprained your ankle. An old friend on a trapping expedition came along and takes you to a cabin. He could get to the claims office tow, and offers to take you. Traveling together, it will take 2 more weeks to get there.
      If you tell him and make a deal, he alone could get there in about 10 days. If you were well, you could do it easily in 7 days, but you cannot make it alone without a few days rest and then 10 days to 2 weeks of travel.

      You are not sure whether he can exercise the option and file the claim correctly, because he is not too bright, tends to drink to excess, and is not the single-minded hustler that you are. He is a simple, decent fellow who like trapping, but would, you suspect, both need and desire financial independence. You think you can trust him, if you offer to split 50:50, since he would need your expertise and help to capitalize on the discovery."

  


What is your decision

                                                                                                            Go with him  _______

                                                                                                Go it alone    _______

                                                                                                Send him       _______


Next: Having made your decision, decide how much and what kind of communication will your group provided to the trapper?

Finally, study the 6 B's of Antenarrating, and then make your decision. Then write out the 6 B's as an analysis of your strategy.

1. Before


2. Beneath


3. Bets


4. Becoming


5. Between


6. Beyond




Option: Combine pairs of groups together, and the task is to come to a consensus strategy implementation (point of Part II  is getting things down through people who are out of your direct control).

Some t
opics you can invite us to cover from the above books:


LIST OF REFERENCE BOOKS FOR DOCTORAL EDUCATION

Boje, D. M. (2001). Narrative methods for organizational & communication research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Boje, D. M. (2011). Introduction to agential antenarratives that shape the future of organizations. In Boje (ed.) Storytelling and the future of organizations: An Antenarrative Handbook (pp. 19-38). London: Routledge.

 

Boje, D. M. (2008). Storytelling Organizations. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

 

Boje, D. M. (2014). Storytelling Organizational Practices: Managing in the quantum age. London: Routledge.

 

Boje, D. M. (2017). Theaters of Capitalism: Creating Conscious Capitalism. Las Cruces, NM: TamaraLand publishing.

Boje, D. M. (2019a). Global Storytelling: There is No Planet B. Singapore/London/NY: World Scientific.

 

Boje, D. M. (2019b). Organizational Research: Storytelling In Action. London/NY: Routledge.



Boje, D. M. (in review)
Storytellling  Interventions in Global Water Crisis (Download free until published)Boje, D. M.; Sanchez, Mabel (2019a). The Emerald of Handbook of Quantum Storytelling Consulting. UK: Emerald Press

Boje, D. M.; Sanchez, Mabel (2019b). The Emerald of Handbook of Management and Organizational Inquiry. UK: Emerald Press.

Boje, D. M.; Rosile, G. A. (in press). How to Use Conversational Storytelling Interviews for Your Dissertation. UK: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
Download for free until published in 2020

Rosile, Grace Ann. (2016). Tribal Wisdom for Business Ethics. Bingley, UK: Emerald Group Publishing Limited.


RECENT JOURNAL ARTICLES

Pelly, Robert Duncan M; Boje, David M. (2019a). "A Case for Follettian Interventions in Public Universities." Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education. Accepted Mar 20 2019. Access PDF here.

Jacob A.  Massoud, David M.  Boje, Elizabeth  Capener, Marilu  Marcillo (2019). "Intertextual Analysis of the BP Prudhoe Bay Disaster: Applying the 5 B’s of Antenarrative." International Journal of Organizational Analysis. Accepted Apr 12 2019. preprint available at Emerald with password

 Boje, David M. (2019a). “'Storytelling Organization”'is Being Transformed into Discourse of 'Digital Organization'” Accepted April 19 2019 for M@n@ging Journal.Click here for pre-publication PDF

 Pelly, Robert Duncah; Boje, David M. (2019b). Neoliberalism in the North American UniversityToward Integrating Divisions in Agent Orientation Via a Follettian Differentiated Relational Ontologypublished, Communication, Language At Work (CLAW) journal, https://tidsskrift.dk/claw/article/view/116132/164304

Rosile, Grace Ann; Boje, David M.’ Herder, Rick; Sanchez, Rick. (2019, in press).  The Coalition of Immokalee Workers uses Ensemble Storytelling Processes to Overcome Enslavement in Corporate Supply Chains. This is earlier draft of article accepted by Business and Society Journal, July 2019. Click here for PDF draft version.

Boje, David M.; Rosile, Grace Ann. (2019). 'Conversational Storytelling Research Methods: Cats, Dogs, and Humans in Pet Capitalism. Communication Research and Practice journal. Accepted Oct 9, 2019. Click here for pre-publication PDF.

Rosile, Grace Ann; Boje, David M.; Claw, Carma. (2018). “Ensemble Leadership Theory: Collectivist, Relational, and Heterarchical Roots from Indigenous Contexts.” Leadership journal, Vol. 14(3) 307–328.  CLICK HERE for online prepublication draft, or here for PDF from Sage,

RECENT PRESENTATIONS (slides and video)

Boje, D. M. (2019a) Cabrini Cohort presentation on Futuring and the Negation of Globalization Slavery

Boje. D. M. (2019b) How to Deconstruct Coca-Cola Water Storytelling as a Greenwashing deception?

Boje, D. M. (2019c). What is the 'storytelling science' of Abilene's Water -- talk given April 18 2019 at McMurry University. Slides at https://davidboje.com/Abilene/Abilene Boje storytelling science hour Apr 2019.pptx

Boje, D. M. (2019d). Why is SEAM’s self-correcting ‘storytelling science’ better than Appreciative Inquiry at Conserving the Virtual Water of the Planet?  Apr 27, ISEOR Institution doctoral seminar. Lyon France. Slides at https://davidboje.com/Lyon/Boje ISEOR doctoral presentation April 27 2019.pptx

Boje, D. M. (2019e). ‘Water’s business models and business storytelling’. Keynote presentation to ‘Storytelling and the Future of Organizations Conference’  8-10 May 2019. Slides at https://davidboje.com/Aalborg/Boje%20keynote%20SHORT%20VERSION.pptx

Boje, D. M. (2019f) ‘A 'storytelling science' 'little s' for your dissertation and after’ May 14, presentation to seminar, Southern Denmark University, Kolding, DK. Slides at https://davidboje.com/Kolding/Doing Self correcting storytelling science dissertation KOLDING May 14 2019.pptx

Boje, D. M. (2019g) ‘Dark side of water storytelling. Keynote presentation to Dark Side of Communication Conference (2nd international and interdisciplinary conference on Discourse and Communication in Professional Contexts.) 14 – 16 August Aalborg University.  Slides at https://davidboje.com/Aalborg/Dark%20Side%20of%20Water%20Storytelling%20for%20Aalborg%20Conference.pptx

Boje, D. M. (2019h). Storytelling and temporal interplay seminar. Invited presentation to Centre for Organizational Time (COT) Copenhagen Business School August 26.  Slides at https://davidboje.com/Aalborg/Storytelling%20and%20Temporal%20Interpaly%20Center%20for%20Time%20CBS.pptx

Boje, D. M. (2019i). ‘The Dark Side of Psychology of Make Believe in the Face of Global Heating’. Invited presentation to the Psychology Department New Mexico State University, Sept 27. Slides at https://davidboje.com/Storyteling and Psychology Sep 27 2019.pptx

Boje, D. M.; Jørgensen, Kenneth Mølbjerg; Sparre, Mogens ; Vibe, Pernille; Friis, Ole; Mølbjerg, Mikkel. (2019). “What is True Storytelling: Migrant Care in Nordic Countries” May 21-22. Slides at https://davidboje.com/truestorytelling/Skagen%20TRUE%20STORYTELLING%20May%2021%202019.pptx  YouTube 11 min at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4hCzSN4hF8

 

  Boje, D. M. (2018). 'Global Water Scarcity', presentation to the 8th annual Quantum Storytelling Conference, Las Cruces New Mexico. December. See YouTube video at https://youtu.be/zyA7Lst8mEs

Rosile, Grace Ann. (2019). Worker-Driven Corporate Social Responsibility of  Ensemble CIW. Presentation to 2019 Cabrini Cohort



 

Figure 2: The world of Nature is a multiplicity which human actions is changing. So we need to move from Attraction A (Predator Fossil Fuel Capitalism) to Attraction B (Socially & Ecologically Responsible Degrowth Capitalism)

Click here for slides for the Storytelling and Temporal Interplay  Seminar at Copenhagen Business School, 

Centre for Organizational Time (COT)
August 26 2019


Storytelling is dynamic so it can be a part of dynamic complexity Grace Ann and David call the Ensembles of Multiplicities

DOCTORAL RESEARCH SEMINARS (open to Graduate Students and Faculty)

-          Doctoral Seminar 1 led by Grace Ann Rosile - : Managing your thesis through to submission slides Differences in Western Narratives, Living Stories, and Antenarratives

-         Doctoral  Seminar 2 led by Grace Ann Rosile with D. Boje - TPutting your voice into dissertation, presenting your research for job interviews and funders; autoethnography Slides for Seminar 2 and Seminar 3 are here.

-          Doctoral Seminar 3 led by Grace Ann Rosile with D. Boje - Introduction to Self-Correcting Induction Methodology; practice linking experience to theory; Why conversational interviewing is better method than semi-structured interviewing (Hawthorne studies) Slides for STORYTELLING DATA ANALYSIS and Deconstructing Coca Cola STORY MAP

-          Doctoral Seminar -led by Grace Ann Rosile with D. Boje  Publishing with colleagues or classmates; seeking co-authors, applying for grants, consulting


Wednesday  Leadership Class  . Slides on Braided Leadership after the Shooting Slides on Leadership and Sociomateriality with Popper and Sartre?


STORYTELLING SCIENCE SEMINAR SERIES (Open to all):
- Advanced Storytelling Science Seminar 1 by David Boje - What is  the Storytelling Science Paradigm Shift HERE ARE SLIDES for latest STORYTELLING SCIENCE with Braided River focus.
- Advance Storytelling Science Seminar 2  by David Boje - Tuesday 26 March 2-3PM  SLIDES FOR CONVERSATIONAL STORYTELLING METHODOLOGY

Special slides for Rohny = AI and Positive Science Deconstruction
- What would Karl Popper Say about Grounded Theory - University-wide seminar (date to be announced) by David Boje


Storytelling is multifractality, an ensemble of multiplicities

Fractal narrative’ is defined as “a narrative that finds its best accomplished form in the Web” in hyperlink networks (Durate, 2014: 284).  A fractal-narrative is linear or cyclical in form, with a central monologic or monomythic structure, a heroic character, in a complex plot within plots, patterns within patterns — that repeats and repeats, from one telling to the next (Boje, 2015, in press).

“A fractal story is defined here as a web of fluid, living story interrelationships between urban chaos and fractal cyber order that is centrifugal, veering away from order toward anarchies, discontinuity and erratic, violent urbanity” (p. 7 Boje editor,  Organizational Change and Global Standardization: Solutions to Standards and ...


The fractal antenarrative is different than these other fractals,. The Fractal-Antenarrative is the before-bets-beneath-between-beyond-becoming patterning, what Jeff Noon (1996) the “randomologist” calls the Vurt, sometimes in pattern of ‘downward fractal-spiral’ (
XXiX), e.g. the downward fractal-spiral of the eco-system with loss of more and more species, extinct by unintelligent action as John Dewey calls it (Boje, 2015: xxxii).




Figure 5

Good to tell the founding story of Cabrini's role in all this new method appraoch

Figure 6
This is a photo of 12-step application of Mary Parker Follett's work. It is about the 'relational process ontology' approach and some if its extensions. It was a breakthrough moment for us in the seminar.

TFW virus

Figure 7This was done at Cabrini 2017

Figure H


Articles worth your time

  1. Wolff Lundholt, Marianne; Boje, David M. (2018). Understanding Organizational Narrative-Counter-narratives Dynamics: An overview of Communication Constitutes Organization (CCO) and Storytelling Organization Theory (STO) approaches, Accepted Aug 31 2018 at Communication and Language at Work´ (CLAW) journal Click here for copy of article.
  2. Bell, E., & Willmott, H. (2019). Ethics, politics and embodied imagination in crafting scientific knowledge. Human Relations, In-Press.  Click here to request a copy from the OU Author.
  3. Sele, K., & Grand, S. (2016). Unpacking the dynamics of ecologies of routines: Mediators and their generative effects in routine interactions. Organization Science, 27(3), 722-738. See copy of article

STUDY GUIDES:

  1. Please download 20 Storytelling Paradigms; 18 are beyond 1st 3 waves of Grounded Theory, and are basis of two new books in menu at your left about 4th wave approaches.# 20 is True Storytelling Ontology


Slide Shows:

  1. Slides for  'storytelling science' problem solving CLICK HERE FOR SLIDES for Boje Keynote: 'Water's Business Models and Business Storytelling'

  2. TRUE STORYTELLING AS CONSULTATION TOOL - Slides David Boje & Jens Larsen 'Old Friends Industries' Presentation to 65 public executives and managers on Wed May 16, 2018 Copenhagen

    "true storytelling" with Jens Larsen and Lena Bruun, partners Old Friends Industries

      1. ,True Storytelling PART 1: INTRODUCTION (slides part 1) can save humanity

      2. True Storytelling PART 2: SAVING HUMANITY FROM ITS OWN EXTINCTION (slides part 2) and Antenarrative

      3. PART 3: HOW CONSULTANTS CAN USE TRUE STORYTELLING WITH THEIR CLIENTS