Does managerial coaching empower employees? A psychoanalytical approach

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Does managerial coaching empower employees? A psychoanalytical approach. / Jepsen, Kim Sune Karrasch; Dehlholm, Mikkel.

I: Distinktion, Bind 24, Nr. 1, 2023, s. 20-39.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jepsen, KSK & Dehlholm, M 2023, 'Does managerial coaching empower employees? A psychoanalytical approach', Distinktion, bind 24, nr. 1, s. 20-39. https://doi.org/10.1080/1600910X.2020.1832023

APA

Jepsen, K. S. K., & Dehlholm, M. (2023). Does managerial coaching empower employees? A psychoanalytical approach. Distinktion, 24(1), 20-39. https://doi.org/10.1080/1600910X.2020.1832023

Vancouver

Jepsen KSK, Dehlholm M. Does managerial coaching empower employees? A psychoanalytical approach. Distinktion. 2023;24(1):20-39. https://doi.org/10.1080/1600910X.2020.1832023

Author

Jepsen, Kim Sune Karrasch ; Dehlholm, Mikkel. / Does managerial coaching empower employees? A psychoanalytical approach. I: Distinktion. 2023 ; Bind 24, Nr. 1. s. 20-39.

Bibtex

@article{8caf657133d143beb3628241b165a944,
title = "Does managerial coaching empower employees?: A psychoanalytical approach",
abstract = "Managerial coaching is an important and arguably emblematic example of the transformation of managerial techniques that has occurred in the last decades, where more equal work relations and empowerment of employees is increasingly promoted. In the literature on managerial coaching, the role of the manager-coach is to open up a space for the employee to formulate her desires and attempt to clear the way for their realization. Tensions between the desire of employees and that of managers, although to some degree acknowledged in parts of the literature, is not sufficiently addressed. Furthermore, there is a marked lack of recognition of how the fact that coaching takes place in the context of hierarchical organizations, operating on markets with the aim of creating profit, affect the praxis of managerial coaching. We address these issues by conducting a Lacanian discourse analysis of managerial coaching literature, and show that it operates with a paradoxical notion of autonomy: The autonomy of employees is only called upon in so far as it can be aligned with the aims of management. Through a transposition of Lacan's four discourses, we furthermore situate the phenomena of managerial coaching in the context of the history of management forms. We argue that managerial coaching is emblematic of a shift from what Lacan calls the University discourse (under Taylorist management), to what is best understood as a semblance of the psychoanalytical discourse. It is only a semblance, since the manager-coach in reality retains the position of master in relation to employees.",
keywords = "Management, organization, neo-capitalism, managerial coaching, empowerment, autonomy, psychoanalysis, discourse analysis, SUBJECTIVITY, PERSPECTIVE, GENRES, SELF",
author = "Jepsen, {Kim Sune Karrasch} and Mikkel Dehlholm",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1080/1600910X.2020.1832023",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "20--39",
journal = "Distinktion",
issn = "1600-910X",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Does managerial coaching empower employees?

T2 - A psychoanalytical approach

AU - Jepsen, Kim Sune Karrasch

AU - Dehlholm, Mikkel

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Managerial coaching is an important and arguably emblematic example of the transformation of managerial techniques that has occurred in the last decades, where more equal work relations and empowerment of employees is increasingly promoted. In the literature on managerial coaching, the role of the manager-coach is to open up a space for the employee to formulate her desires and attempt to clear the way for their realization. Tensions between the desire of employees and that of managers, although to some degree acknowledged in parts of the literature, is not sufficiently addressed. Furthermore, there is a marked lack of recognition of how the fact that coaching takes place in the context of hierarchical organizations, operating on markets with the aim of creating profit, affect the praxis of managerial coaching. We address these issues by conducting a Lacanian discourse analysis of managerial coaching literature, and show that it operates with a paradoxical notion of autonomy: The autonomy of employees is only called upon in so far as it can be aligned with the aims of management. Through a transposition of Lacan's four discourses, we furthermore situate the phenomena of managerial coaching in the context of the history of management forms. We argue that managerial coaching is emblematic of a shift from what Lacan calls the University discourse (under Taylorist management), to what is best understood as a semblance of the psychoanalytical discourse. It is only a semblance, since the manager-coach in reality retains the position of master in relation to employees.

AB - Managerial coaching is an important and arguably emblematic example of the transformation of managerial techniques that has occurred in the last decades, where more equal work relations and empowerment of employees is increasingly promoted. In the literature on managerial coaching, the role of the manager-coach is to open up a space for the employee to formulate her desires and attempt to clear the way for their realization. Tensions between the desire of employees and that of managers, although to some degree acknowledged in parts of the literature, is not sufficiently addressed. Furthermore, there is a marked lack of recognition of how the fact that coaching takes place in the context of hierarchical organizations, operating on markets with the aim of creating profit, affect the praxis of managerial coaching. We address these issues by conducting a Lacanian discourse analysis of managerial coaching literature, and show that it operates with a paradoxical notion of autonomy: The autonomy of employees is only called upon in so far as it can be aligned with the aims of management. Through a transposition of Lacan's four discourses, we furthermore situate the phenomena of managerial coaching in the context of the history of management forms. We argue that managerial coaching is emblematic of a shift from what Lacan calls the University discourse (under Taylorist management), to what is best understood as a semblance of the psychoanalytical discourse. It is only a semblance, since the manager-coach in reality retains the position of master in relation to employees.

KW - Management

KW - organization

KW - neo-capitalism

KW - managerial coaching

KW - empowerment

KW - autonomy

KW - psychoanalysis

KW - discourse analysis

KW - SUBJECTIVITY

KW - PERSPECTIVE

KW - GENRES

KW - SELF

U2 - 10.1080/1600910X.2020.1832023

DO - 10.1080/1600910X.2020.1832023

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 20

EP - 39

JO - Distinktion

JF - Distinktion

SN - 1600-910X

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 254986753