Abstract

The emergence of highly complex sustainability challenges in modern society has led to the necessity of searching for more effective approaches to education for sustainable development. Research has shown that reflection leads toward more profound levels of engagement with respect to sustainable actions. Therefore, higher education has a role to play in stimulating reflection in light of sustainability. Art-based techniques, which have not been included alongside traditional teaching methods, have begun to gain the attention of researchers and teachers in higher education as they produce a deeper impact and involvement and can have a positive influence on the minds and hearts of the students. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate that poetry can contribute to integrating the arts and humanities in management education. The potential effect of poetry on business management majors is being explored as a part of their Corporate Social Responsibility course. Poetry has considerable potential as an innovative approach to teach sustainability, but it is rather unusual in business education. Poetry was chosen as an enabler for reflection and emotions. This original teaching project was followed by a research project relying on reflective assignments. A rereading of Walter Benjamin'sIlluminationsfrom the perspective of sustainability studies was a source of inspiration, in particular “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” “The Storyteller” and “Unpacking My Library.” The paper assumes that Benjamin's ideas relate to a slow journey involving “awakening,” “wisdom” and “in a process,” three elements that are at the core of promoting a sustainability mindset. The research project consisted of four reflection assignments students had to comply with: reading and interpreting poetry; searching for a poem which would be most appropriate for the discussed sustainability topic; creating their own poem and reflecting on the whole task. The research took place in the second semester of 2020 and first semester of 2021, all in COVID-19 pandemic context. Students' participation was not mandatory, but the majority joined. Their perceptions and impressions reinforce the existing knowledge about the emotional power of poetry to encourage reflection. The results show that poetry plays a relevant role in encouraging future managers to develop a frame of mind that incorporates sustainability and responsibility. Business students are open to this approach because it adds a new and unexpected dimension to their studies. Despite the urge to integrate reflections, this is still an exception for the majority of management courses. The results suggest that poetry is a relevant instrument to promote a more sustainable mindset among future managers. Paradoxically, by emphasizing a slow journey, i.e., allowing time for integrating reflective practices, a transition toward sustainability in daily managerial processes can be accelerated.

Highlights

  • Relying on the power of poetry for reflective practices, this paper aims to build a bridge between the arts and humanities on the one hand and the pure instrumental approach of management sciences on the other hand

  • Why democracy needs the humanities,” we argue thatintroducing arts and humanities into the business curricula enables the integration of reflection and emotions in relation to business and management education

  • The majority of the respondents addressed the concept of the bond between nature and humanity in the perspective of humanity’s need for nature, the harm that humanity has brought to the environment and the necessity to take care of the planet. Judging by these answers it can be seen that the students took this topic to heart and immediately started reflecting on the modern sustainability issues when asked about the bond

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Summary

Introduction

Relying on the power of poetry for reflective practices, this paper aims to build a bridge between the arts and humanities on the one hand and the pure instrumental approach of management sciences on the other hand. The paper thereby contributes to the growing demand for integrating arts and humanities in management education by using poetry as a trigger for a sustainability mindset. In the view of enabling future perspectives, perhaps humanity’s best survival strategy lies behind the generation in general and the paradigm of sustainability education in particular. It is especially crucial for students majoring in business and management as these graduates will be responsible for the companies’ policies. Why democracy needs the humanities,” we argue that (re-)introducing arts and humanities into the business curricula enables the integration of reflection and emotions in relation to business and management education. Raelin (2002, p. 66) defines reflection as “the practice of periodically stepping back to ponder the meaning of what has recently transpired to ourselves and to others in our immediate environment.” According to Treacy and Gaunt (2021, p. 488) “Reflection concerns thinking about practice before (reflection-for-action), during (-in-action) and after (-on-action) it takes place.”

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