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Management, Drop Your Tools: Military Metaphors for Wildland Firefighting and Public Resistance to “Safety” Legacies of Tragedy Fires
Unformatted Document Text:  29 Dombeck, M. (2000). The Mann Gulch Fire: They did not die in vain [article based on remarks made by USDA Forest Service Chief in Helena MT on August 5, 1999, the 50 th anniversary of the Mann Gulch Fire]. Fire Management Today 60:2, 4-6. Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy and Program Review Report. (1995, Dec 18). website revised Feb 151996; Accessed Feb 12, 2002. Forest fire deaths: Forest service’s ’willful inaction’ is to blame [editorial] (2001, July 18). The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, p. B7. Foster, D. (1999, July 4). Storm King tragedy taught valuable lessons. Rocky Mountain News, p. 29A. Gephart, R.P., Jr. (1993). The textual approach: Risk and blame in disaster sensemaking. Academy of Management Journal 36:6, 1465-1514. Gersick, C.J.G. (1990). Trade-offs in managing organizational culture. Communication Yearbook. 13, 149-155. Glaser, S.R. (1994). Teamwork and communication: A 3-year study of change. Management Communication Quarterly. 7 (3, February), 282-296. Hardy-Short, D.C., and Short, C.B. (1995). Fire, death, and rebirth: A metaphoric analysis of the 1988 Yellowstone fire debate. Western Journal of Communication. 59 (2, Spring), 103-125. Hearit, K.M. (1995). “Mistakes were made”: Organizations, apologia, and crises of social legitimacy. Communication Studies 46 (Spring), 1-17. Junger, S. (2001). Fire. New York: W.W. Norton. Kaufman, H. (1960). The forest ranger: A study in administrative behavior. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Kelleher, S. (2001, September 2). Fire experts fault Forest Service's own probes: Investigators claim agency whitewashes errors in deaths. The Seattle Times, p. A1. Kowalski, R. (1995, May 28). Storm king report disputed: Blasts of hot gases get blame in 14 deaths. Denver Post, p. A01. MacLean, J.N. (1999). Fire on the mountain: The true story of the South Canyon fire. New York: William Morrow and Co.

Authors: Thackaberry, Jennifer.
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29
Dombeck, M. (2000). The Mann Gulch Fire: They did not die in vain [article based on
remarks made by USDA Forest Service Chief in Helena MT on August 5, 1999, the 50
th
anniversary of the Mann Gulch Fire]. Fire Management Today 60:2, 4-6.
Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy and Program Review Report. (1995, Dec 18).
website revised Feb 151996; Accessed Feb 12, 2002.
Forest fire deaths: Forest service’s ’willful inaction’ is to blame [editorial] (2001, July 18).
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, p. B7.
Foster, D. (1999, July 4). Storm King tragedy taught valuable lessons. Rocky Mountain
News, p. 29A.
Gephart, R.P., Jr. (1993). The textual approach: Risk and blame in disaster sensemaking.
Academy of Management Journal 36:6, 1465-1514.
Gersick, C.J.G. (1990). Trade-offs in managing organizational culture. Communication
Yearbook. 13, 149-155.
Glaser, S.R. (1994). Teamwork and communication: A 3-year study of change. Management
Communication Quarterly. 7 (3, February), 282-296.
Hardy-Short, D.C., and Short, C.B. (1995). Fire, death, and rebirth: A metaphoric analysis of
the 1988 Yellowstone fire debate. Western Journal of Communication. 59 (2, Spring), 103-125.
Hearit, K.M. (1995). “Mistakes were made”: Organizations, apologia, and crises of social
legitimacy. Communication Studies 46 (Spring), 1-17.
Junger, S. (2001). Fire. New York: W.W. Norton.
Kaufman, H. (1960). The forest ranger: A study in administrative behavior. Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press.
Kelleher, S. (2001, September 2). Fire experts fault Forest Service's own probes:
Investigators claim agency whitewashes errors in deaths. The Seattle Times, p. A1.
Kowalski, R. (1995, May 28). Storm king report disputed: Blasts of hot gases get blame in
14 deaths. Denver Post, p. A01.
MacLean, J.N. (1999). Fire on the mountain: The true story of the South Canyon fire. New
York: William Morrow and Co.


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