TY - CHAP AB - Abstract I am a bike-sharing activist at New Mexico State University (NMSU) and am using quantum storytelling, as well as ethnographic, methods to study its bike-sharing implementation process. Moreover, quantum storytelling is, by its very nature, an intervention into the process it observes and, in this case, utilized as a means to encourage the university-governing entities to support and fund a bike-sharing program. Quantum storytelling is formally defined as β€œthe interplay of quantum understandings with storytelling processes,” including their counternarratives (Boje, 2014, p. 100). It is not human dramatic action simply put into text or context. Rather, it is establishing a pattern of assemblages of actants – human, nonhuman (animals, plants, etc.), and material (in this case, bikes, paths, and so on) – and providing a storytelling that accounts for their inseparable spacetimemattering (Boje, 2014; Boje & Henderson, 2014). Additionally, quantum storytelling helps make explicit what Heidegger (1962) calls fore-having, fore-structuring, fore-conception, fore-telling, and fore-caring (as developed Boje, Svane, & Gergerich, in review). It allows for antenarrative preview of the way to operationalize bike-sharing through visual media, including pictures, documents, five-year plans, campus maps, bikes, and the riders themselves. Through this presentation, I will show embodied practices stemming from quantum storytelling, and do so using both a Barthean S/Z and Bojean antenarrative analysis of the bikeshare implementation process. SN - 978-1-78635-671-0, 978-1-78635-672-7/ DO - 10.1108/978-1-78635-671-020181016 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78635-671-020181016 AU - Lakey Jamie ED - David M. Boje ED - Mabel Sanchez PY - 2018 Y1 - 2018/01/01 TI - Bike-Sharing from a Quantum Storytelling Perspective T2 - The Emerald Handbook of Quantum Storytelling Consulting PB - Emerald Publishing Limited SP - 223 EP - 242 Y2 - 2024/04/18 ER -