Metaphors and Meaning: An Intercultural Analysis of the Concept of Teamwork
- 24 June 2001
- journal article
- Published by JSTOR in Administrative Science Quarterly
- Vol. 46 (2) , 274-303
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2667088
Abstract
This paper develops a conceptual framework to explain different understandings of the concept of teamwork across national and organizational cultures. Five different metaphors for teamwork (military, sports, community, family, and associates) were derived from the language team members used during interviews in four different geographic locations of six multinational corporations. Results indicated that use of the teamwork metaphors varies across countries and organizations, after controlling for gender, team function, and total words in an interview. Analyses of specific relationships between national cultural values and categories of metaphor use and between dimensions of organizational culture and categories of metaphor use revealed patterns of expectations about team roles, scope, membership, and objectives that arise in different cultural contexts. We discuss the implications of this variance for future research on teams and the management of teams in multinational organizations.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- From knowledge accumulation to accommodation: cycles of collective cognition in work groupsJournal of Organizational Behavior, 2001
- Psychological Safety and Learning Behavior in Work TeamsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1999
- Context and Charisma: A "Meso" Level Examination of the Relationship of Organic Structure, Collectivism, and Crisis to Charismatic LeadershipJournal of Management, 1998
- Taking Stock in Our Progress on Individualism-Collectivism: 100 Years of Solidarity and CommunityJournal of Management, 1998
- Collectivistic orientation in teams: an individual and group-level analysisJournal of Organizational Behavior, 1997
- The effect of national culture on the choice between licensing and direct foreign investmentStrategic Management Journal, 1994
- Critical Incidents in Communicating Culture to Newcomers: The Meaning is the MessageHuman Relations, 1994
- Computer-facilitated Qualitative Data Analysis: Potential Contributions to Management ResearchJournal of Management, 1993
- Culture and Subcultures: An Analysis of Organizational KnowledgeAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1992
- Work-Related Values of ManagersJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1990