“…Organizations have become major actors in the modern rhetorical landscape and scholarship has subsequently explored organizational rhetoric as a form of relatively intentional, persuasive communication to internal and external stakeholders with implications for the commitment to, identification with, and subjectification from an organization (Cheney & Lair, 2005; Cheney et al, 2008; Hanchey & Jensen, 2021; Meisenbach & McMillan, 2006; Sillince & Suddaby, 2008). Organizational rhetoric presents discursive resources, such as a “concept, phrase, expression, trope, or other linguistic device” (Kuhn et al, 2008, p. 163) that direct the interpretation of certain conceptions of experiences, persons, or places, such as those about labor (Kuhn et al, 2008).…”