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The gaslighting of authentic leadership 2.0

Alvesson, Mats LU and Einola, Katja LU (2022) In Leadership 18(6). p.814-831
Abstract

This article is a response to Bill Gardner and Kelly McCauley’s ‘gaslighting’ critique of our text on the perils of authentic leadership. Against gaslighting 1.0 (evilly trying to convince people to doubt their perceptions), we propose gaslighting 2.0 (enlightenment). We argue that organizations face severe problems and challenges that cannot be solved by motivating managers to engage in introspection and being overly preoccupied by their own authenticity. A search for one’s true self is a personal journey of inner growth and heightened self-awareness that individuals, leaders and non-leaders may engage in and find highly beneficial, but outside any notion of exercising influence or power on others to reach career objectives or... (More)

This article is a response to Bill Gardner and Kelly McCauley’s ‘gaslighting’ critique of our text on the perils of authentic leadership. Against gaslighting 1.0 (evilly trying to convince people to doubt their perceptions), we propose gaslighting 2.0 (enlightenment). We argue that organizations face severe problems and challenges that cannot be solved by motivating managers to engage in introspection and being overly preoccupied by their own authenticity. A search for one’s true self is a personal journey of inner growth and heightened self-awareness that individuals, leaders and non-leaders may engage in and find highly beneficial, but outside any notion of exercising influence or power on others to reach career objectives or corporate goals. The broad use of simple recipes with claims of overwhelming positive effects is problematic. Leadership research is often based on highly problematic measures, making most efforts to capture the core phenomenon unreliable. That many people are attracted by simplistic, positive-sounding and ego-enhancing formulas is not the same as evidence for theoretical value and relevance of a truth claim. Taking aspiration as a critical element would call for the development and study of Aspirational Authentic Leadership Theory, which would be something quite different from the static study of how managers score in terms of being true to their values, a core self, and so on. In-depth process studies of managers trying to be authentic navigating dilemmas at work could be an alternative to focus further research on.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
authentic leadership, Authenticity, critical management studies, gaslighting
in
Leadership
volume
18
issue
6
pages
18 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85134368027
ISSN
1742-7150
DOI
10.1177/17427150221125271
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
beb2c55d-82c5-4a9e-895c-79dd4ef70a91
date added to LUP
2023-02-08 15:31:08
date last changed
2023-02-08 15:31:08
@article{beb2c55d-82c5-4a9e-895c-79dd4ef70a91,
  abstract     = {{<p>This article is a response to Bill Gardner and Kelly McCauley’s ‘gaslighting’ critique of our text on the perils of authentic leadership. Against gaslighting 1.0 (evilly trying to convince people to doubt their perceptions), we propose gaslighting 2.0 (enlightenment). We argue that organizations face severe problems and challenges that cannot be solved by motivating managers to engage in introspection and being overly preoccupied by their own authenticity. A search for one’s true self is a personal journey of inner growth and heightened self-awareness that individuals, leaders and non-leaders may engage in and find highly beneficial, but outside any notion of exercising influence or power on others to reach career objectives or corporate goals. The broad use of simple recipes with claims of overwhelming positive effects is problematic. Leadership research is often based on highly problematic measures, making most efforts to capture the core phenomenon unreliable. That many people are attracted by simplistic, positive-sounding and ego-enhancing formulas is not the same as evidence for theoretical value and relevance of a truth claim. Taking aspiration as a critical element would call for the development and study of Aspirational Authentic Leadership Theory, which would be something quite different from the static study of how managers score in terms of being true to their values, a core self, and so on. In-depth process studies of managers trying to be authentic navigating dilemmas at work could be an alternative to focus further research on.</p>}},
  author       = {{Alvesson, Mats and Einola, Katja}},
  issn         = {{1742-7150}},
  keywords     = {{authentic leadership; Authenticity; critical management studies; gaslighting}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{814--831}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Leadership}},
  title        = {{The gaslighting of authentic leadership 2.0}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17427150221125271}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/17427150221125271}},
  volume       = {{18}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}