The “Moral Complexity in Leadership“ series of cases and teaching notes help business instructors harness the power of fiction to prepare students for the moral and ethical dilemmas they will face throughout their careers. Meaningful fiction challenges students intellectually and emotionally; it reveals the inner worlds of human players and enables learning that can be difficult to access through case studies, commentary, or reporting. Through literature, students will wrestle with the kinds of problems they will face as leaders looking to make courageous decisions aligned with their moral codes. The works in this series represent a wide range of settings, viewpoints, and cultural frameworks; the characters are complex and contradictory, and the systems within which they operate (whether family, organizational, or cultural) influence them in varied ways. They have been taught to executive, full- and part-time MBA student audiences for many years. The series aims to increase students' understanding of moral frameworks and enhance their skills in facilitating and participating in healthy and productive dialogue about complex and provocative issues. This installment of the series examines Raymond Carver's “A Small, Good Thing,” in which married couple Howard and Ann find comfort from an unexpected source after losing their son. In the story, their child is hit by a car on the morning of his birthday and later dies. As his parents grieve, they receive threatening phone calls from a baker who is angry that Ann never picked up the cake she ordered. Once the baker discovers their son has died, he apologizes and they talk into the morning of loneliness and grief. Carver's story examines how humans sometimes fail to communicate effectively due to misinterpreted context.
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Case Study|
August 01 2023
Moral Complexity in Leadership: Empathy “A Small, Good Thing,” by Raymond Carver Available to Purchase
This case was prepared by Professor Brooke Vuckovic and Rebecca Talbot.
Received:
April 25 2025
Accepted:
April 25 2025
Online ISSN: 1111-111X
Print ISSN: 1111-111X
© The Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University
2023
Northwestern University
Cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion and are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management. This case was based on publicly available information. For pedagogical purposes, the authors might have fictionalized individuals, conversations, strategies, assessments, or other detilas. To order copies or to request permission to reproduce materials, call 847.491.5400, or email cases@kellogg.northwestern.edu. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, used in a spreadsheet, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the permission of Kellogg Case Publishing.
Teaching Notes 1–5.
Article history
Received:
April 25 2025
Accepted:
April 25 2025
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Citation
Vuckovic B, Talbot R (2023;), "Moral Complexity in Leadership: Empathy “A Small, Good Thing,” by Raymond Carver". Teaching Notes, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print.
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