Dòng Nội dung
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Charlotte s web / by E. B. White ; pictures by Garth Williams.
New York : Harper & Row, [1952]
184 p. : ill. ; 29 cm.



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Charlotte s web / E.B. White ; pictures by Garth Williams.
New York, N.Y. : Harper trophy., 1980
184 p. ; 23 cm.

Wilbur, the pig, is desolate when he discovers that he is destined to be the farmer s Christmas dinner until his spider friend, Charlotte decides to help him.

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Mooncoin castle : or, Skulduggery rewarded / Brinton Turkle
New York : Viking Press, [1970]
141 p. : ill. , ; 25 cm.

A ghost and a witch agree to help the jackdaws prevent the razing of Mooncoin Castle ruins to make way for a supermarket.

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Strategy implementation as fantasising – becoming the leading bank / Pasi Sajasalo, Tommi Auvinen, Tuomo Takala, Marko Järvenpää & Teppo Sintonen // Acounting and business research 2016, Vol46, N.3

p303-p325

In this empirical case study we explore the fantasy nature of strategy work and propose fantasising as a framework contributing to the nascent literature dealing with the previously overlooked fantasy nature of strategy. More specifically, our interest is on examining how the meaning of official strategy gets constructed as it is being implemented, as well as and how and why the perceptions may evolve during implementation. Our data consists of official strategy documents and interviews from Finland s largest financial services group and its largest unit. The interviews cover all organisational levels, enabling us to reveal the variations of perceptions of strategy as it is being implemented. The data analysis is carried out by means of qualitative interpretation. According to our findings, the main goal of becoming the leading bank, as outlined in the official strategy, had been adopted throughout the organisation hierarchically. However, conceptions of what would constitute ‘a leading bank’ varied, especially horizontally. The plausibility of the official strategy is constructed through rational techniques (e.g. numerical ‘objective’ accounting information) intertwined with storytelling. As a result we propose that strategy implementation may best be understood as fantasising involving two forms: functional (explicit, short-term-oriented) and symbolic (metaphorical, long-term-oriented). We offer fantasising in these two forms as an addition to fantasy-oriented strategy literature for further exploration to better understand the nature of strategy work