Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Deadly Documents : Technical Communication, Organizational Discourse, and the Holocaust: Lessons from the Rhetorical Work of Everyday Texts - Mark Ward

Deadly Documents

Technical Communication, Organizational Discourse, and the Holocaust: Lessons from the Rhetorical Work of Everyday Texts

By: Mark Ward

Paperback | 30 May 2014 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $183.00

$162.75

11%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $40.69 with

 or 

Available for Backorder. We will order this from our supplier however there isn't a current ETA.

Scholars, teachers, and practitioners of organizational, professional, and technical communication and rhetoric are target audiences for a new book that reaches across those disciplines to explore the dynamics of the Holocaust. More than a history, the book uses the extreme case of the Final Solution to illumine the communicative constitution of organizations and to break new ground on destructive organizational communication and ethics. Deadly Documents: Technical Communication, Organizational Discourse, and the Holocaust—Lessons from the Rhetorical Work of Everyday Texts starts with a microcosmic look at a single Nazi bureau. Through close rhetorical, visual, and discursive analyses of organizational and technical documents produced by the SS Security Police Technical Matters Group—the bureau that managed the Nazi mobile gas van program—author Mark Ward shows how everyday texts functioned as "boundary objects" on which competing organizational interests could project their own interpretations and temporarily negotiate consensus for their parts in the Final Solution.

The initial chapters of Deadly Documents provide a historical ethnography of the SS technical bureau by closely describing the institutional and organizational cultures in which it operated and relating organizational stories told in postwar testimony by the desk-murderers themselves. Then, through examination of the primary material of their documents, Ward demonstrates how this Social Darwinist world of competing Nazi bureaucrats deployed rhetorical and linguistic resources to construct a social reality that normalized genocide. Ward goes beyond the usual Weberian bureaucratic paradigm and applies to the problem of the Holocaust both the interpretive view that sees organizations as socially constructed through communication and the postmodern view that denies the notion of a preexisting social object called an "organization" and instead situates it within larger discourses.

The concluding chapters trace how contemporary scholars of professional communication have wrestled with the Nazi case and developed a consensus explanation that the desk-murderers were amoral technocrats. Though the explanation is dismissed by most historians, it nevertheless offers, Ward argues, a comforting distance between "us" and "them." Yet, as Ward writes, "First, we will learn more about the dynamic role of everyday texts in organizational processes. Second, as we see these processes—perhaps inherent to all organized communities, including our own—at work even in the extreme case of the SS Technical Matters Group, the comforting distance that we now maintain between 'them' and 'us' is necessarily diminished. And third, our newfound discomfort may open productive spaces to revisit conventional wisdoms about the ethics of technical and organizational communication."

More in Communication Studies

The Next Conversation : Argue Less, Talk More - Jefferson Fisher

RRP $36.99

$26.75

28%
OFF
The Culture Code : The Secrets of Highly Successful Groups - Daniel Coyle
Talk : The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves - Alison Wood Brooks
How To Talk : Siblings Without Rivalry - Adele Faber

RRP $29.99

$23.99

20%
OFF
How Writing Works 2ed : A field guide to effective writing - Roslyn Petelin