The voice of introversion at work: Experiences, misconceptions, and implications for practice

Eda Ulus, Inge Aben

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract / Description of output

This paper is a qualitative exploration of the lived experiences of introversion in management and working spaces. We critically interrogate the representation of introversion in management literature, in particular its juxtaposition to extraversion, and we argue that an analysis of individuals’ lived experiences of introversion, as explored through interviews, challenges misconceptions, with implications for organisational and management practices. We draw upon psychoanalytic and postcolonial frameworks to analyse our data, and to question the stark contrast between assumptions made about introversion in popular and academic literature, and the embodied, complex, diverse experiences of introversion as shared in our study by management practitioners and academics in the UK and the US. This project, through an empirical micro-focus on the nuanced experiences of introversion, has also raised questions about the devaluation of thinking within academic spaces. We note the implications of our work for a range of embedded dynamics in organisations, such as masculine norms, and we consider further expansion of this work in multinational organisational settings.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAcademy of Management Proceedings
PublisherAcademy of Management
Volume2017
Edition1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2017

Publication series

NameAcademy of Management Proceedings
PublisherAcademy of Management
Number1
Volume2017
ISSN (Print)0065-0668

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • academia
  • introversion
  • psychoanalytic

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