Public Relations and the Corporate Persona: The Rise of the Affinitive Organization

Author:   Burton Saint John III
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138945012


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   13 July 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Public Relations and the Corporate Persona: The Rise of the Affinitive Organization


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Author:   Burton Saint John III
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9781138945012


ISBN 10:   1138945013
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   13 July 2017
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

This is a fascinating subject. The author uses it to illuminate PR's invisible government working at the heart of organizations to manage perceptions and create profound social changes.It is vital that society understands how much PR shapes our world. This well written, thoroughly researched book on the corporate face, character and voice makes a big contribution to that objective. Simon Moore, Bentley University, USA and author of Public Relations and the History of Ideas. This study of corporate persona, particularly its focus on values and an affinitive approach, is timely given a need to address the decline of public trust in business at the same time as corporations assume an ever greater role in neoliberal capitalist societies. Also, as Burton St John III pointedly notes, corporate persona has been largely ignored in public relations and corporate communication research. As well as creating greater affinity between corporations and their home market, an affinitive approach can reduce the negative colonizing effects of globalization by encouraging global corporate citizenship. Jim Macnamara, Professor of Public Communication, University of Technology Sydney, Australia. Professor Saint John's book is a meticulously researched, gracefully written significant contribution to PR and communications scholarship. The book borders on being an investigative report on the way in which the wooden and off-putting abstraction known as the modern corporation has been carefully fitted out with a recognizably human personality. The domestication of the corporation in the late twentieth century parallels the far more familiar current efforts of the artificial-intelligence community to produce sociable machines. Robert E. Brown, Professor, Communications Department, Salem State University, USA.


This is a fascinating subject. The author uses it to illuminate PR's invisible government working at the heart of organizations to manage perceptions and create profound social changes.It is vital that society understands how much PR shapes our world. This well written, thoroughly researched book on the corporate face, character and voice makes a big contribution to that objective. Simon Moore, Bentley University, USA and author of Public Relations and the History of Ideas. This study of corporate persona, particularly its focus on values and an affinitive approach, is timely given a need to address the decline of public trust in business at the same time as corporations assume an ever greater role in neoliberal capitalist societies. Also, as Burton St John III pointedly notes, corporate persona has been largely ignored in public relations and corporate communication research. As well as creating greater affinity between corporations and their home market, an affinitive approach can reduce the negative colonizing effects of globalization by encouraging global corporate citizenship. Jim Macnamara, Professor of Public Communication, University of Technology Sydney, Australia. Professor Saint John's book is a meticulously researched, gracefully written significant contribution to PR and communications scholarship. The book borders on being an investigative report on the way in which the wooden and off-putting abstraction known as the modern corporation has been carefully fitted out with a recognizably human personality. The domestication of the corporation in the late twentieth century parallels the far more familiar current efforts of the artificial-intelligence community to produce sociable machines. Robert E. Brown, Professor, Communications Department, Salem State University, USA.


Author Information

Burton St. John III is Professor in the Department of Communication at Old Dominion University, USA.

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