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The Postmodern Condition: II. Troubling Ambiguity with Shifting Boundaries and Multiple Roles

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Postmodern leadership is likely to be effective in an organization if there is a good match between the leader’s needs and style at that specific moment and place and the organization’s needs and style at that same moment and place. The context for leadership concerns this matching process. A leader may find, for instance, that he must be capable of and willing to shift his style when working with a relatively immature work group or with a group that is highly mature. Within this context, however, and in his working relationship with members of this group, he may help to promote their maturity, thereby necessitating yet another change in style (which may or may not fit with his own ability or willingness to shift). Similarly, the nature of a task or the processes of decision-making in the organization may change. Leaders must shift gears when entering varying situations. If they are effective, however, leaders will also influence these situations. As a result, leaders may be forced to shift roles precisely because they have helped to bring about a change in context and relationships.

Given the postmodern interplay between globalization and localization, we can expect many leaders to simultaneously play on the global stage and the local stage. We can also expect them to be deeply embedded in their own organization (as a new neighborhood) while also seeking to retain a viable family and community life. The boundaries between work and home are inevitably blurred, leaving little time, in many instances, for leaders to reflect or plan ahead. These postmodern conditions confront the leader with challenges that require both courage and insight.

The vertiginous rise of professional psychological practice during the last two decades years – in its myriad variations – is a response to these challenges, both as a tool for self-development in the context of work and as a form of self-care. If leadership is situational, professional psychology is called upon to provide leadership development of the most customized and “just-in-time” kind.

This set of essays is about our postmodern condition. They are meant to encourage reflection—as well as action—in their readers. This reflection and action, in turn, might finally require that each of us, as busy leaders and professional psychologists, keep that long-delayed appointment with ourselves, so that we might ponder the implications of these themes and their variations in our own life and in our vast as well as intimate communities.

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