000 01341pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2003 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aLevine, David P.
245 _aThe ideal of diversity in organizations
260 _c2003
300 _ap.278-94.
362 _aSep
520 _aThis article offers a psychodynamic exploration of the organizational commitment to diversity. Based on a brief review of organizational rhetoric, two themes are identified. The first is the denial of hatred, which is argued to express the operation of a fantasy of the organization as the peaceable kingdom. This fantasy imagines the organization as a home for those with strong originary group identifications, while refusing to consider how attachment to group identity can foster hate and exclusion. The second theme is the equation of knowledge useful to the organization with life experience connected to group identity. The emphasis in the rhetoric of diversity on the value of experience is linked to a strategy for coping with loss that seeks to make the experience of loss a source of strength. The importance of acknowledging the reality of hate and of coping with, rather than denying, the consequences of loss is emphasized. - Reproduced.
650 _aOrganizations
773 _aAmerican Review of Public Administration
909 _a58182
999 _c58182
_d58182