Abstract
Purpose: Over recent years, public relations (PR) research has diversified in themes and theories. As a result, PR presents itself today as a multi-paradigmatic discipline with competing ideas of progress that mainly circle around questions of ontology and epistemology, i.e. around defining appropriate object and knowledge in PR research. Design/methodology/approach: This conceptual article highlights a third crucial question underlying the debate drawing on a narrative approach: The question of axiology, hence, the normative question how PR research shall develop to contribute to societal progress. Findings: The article presents a model, which describes how normative visions of progress in different PR paradigms – functional, co-creational, social-reflective and critical-cultural – manifest in each distinct combinations of four narrative plots – tragedy, romance, comedy and satire. Originality/value: These findings complement the current debate on disciplinary progress in PR research by fostering reflection and debate on paradigm development and cross-paradigmatic tensions and exchange from an explicit axiological perspective.
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Winkler, P., Kretschmer, J., & Etter, M. (2021). Between tragedy, romance, comedy and satire: narratives of axiological progress in public relations. Journal of Communication Management, 25(4), 353–367. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCOM-11-2020-0145
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