Collective Memory Meets Organizational Identity: Remembering to Forget in a Firm's Rhetorical History

TitleCollective Memory Meets Organizational Identity: Remembering to Forget in a Firm's Rhetorical History
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsMichel Anteby, Virág Molnár
JournalAcademy of Management Journal
Volume55
Issue3
Pagination515-540
ISSN00014273
Call Number76445963
Abstract

Much organizational identity research has grappled with the question of identity emergence or change. Yet the question of identity endurance is equally puzzling. Relying primarily on an analysis of 309 internal bulletins produced at a French aeronautics firm over almost 50 years, we theorize a link between collective memory and organizational identity endurance. More specifically, we show how forgetting in a firm's ongoing rhetorical history-here, the bulletins' repeated omission of contradictory elements in the firm's past (i.e., structural omission) or attempts to neutralize them with valued identity cues (i.e., preemptive neutralization)-sustains its identity. Thus, knowing 'who we are' might depend in part on repeatedly remembering to forget 'who we were not.'

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Short TitleCollective Memory Meets Organizational Identity