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Downsizing, delayering, corporate liposuction, lean manufacturing,
empowerment, knowledge management and networked organization have
shaken traditional assumptions about management to their
foundations. Postmodern conditions have fragmented established
identity resources and created a crisis of managerial
self-confidence. Drawing on detailed qualitative studies and theory
on gender and power to explore the impact of recent changes on
managers' identities and their responses in constructing new and
multiple identities, Managing Identity develops much needed models
for evaluating shifts from modern to postmodern management and new
managerial subjectivities.
'What is CMS for and what might its future be- both inside the
domain of academia and outside it? It's a question that has
beguiled and frustrated academics within and outside its community.
At the hear of CMS is an enduring skepticism concerning the social
and ecological sustainability of prevailing ideas and forms of
management and organization. Using ideas from feminist and queer
theory, authors of this volume aim to generate some thinking and
possibly a nascent agenda. It focuses on the future of CMS but also
intertwines it with ideas as to how scholarly communities can
engage in working lives differently.
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, and regular corporate
scandals, there has been a growing concern with the moral and
ethical foundations of business. Often these concerns are limited
to narrow accounts of governance codes, regulatory procedures or
behaviour incentives, which are often characterized by neoliberal
bias underpinned by western masculine logics. This book challenges
these limited accounts of ethics and responsibility. It looks at
the writing of Gayatri C. Spivak who takes globally networked
markets, people and ideas and provides tools to rethink
subjectivity, ethics and corporate governance. Eschewing strict
hierarchical notions of authority and identity, Spivak's work
invites us to consider who speaks for whom and for what in
organizational contexts. Relationality is also to be found in the
radical politics and feminist ethics of Judith Butler who continues
to draw on and develop her account of performativity to interpret
contemporary organizations, management and work. While popular
accounts of corporate ethics often concern themselves with the aims
and actions of those at the top of organizations, Lauren Berlant
focuses on the struggles of those at the bottom of the new social
structures created by contemporary forms of capital. Finally, the
book also considers ecological challenges through the work of Val
Plumwood, who spent a lifetime considering the threats and
responsibilities we face in environmental terms, and developed a
feminist ecological philosophy for understanding social and species
differences. This book will be relevant to students and researchers
across business and management, organizational studies, critical
management studies, gender studies and sociology.
This third volume in the Routledge Focus on Women Writers in
Organization Studies series challenges us to think again about the
implications of gender, embodiment and fluidity for organizing and
managing. The themes of this book disrupt our understanding of
dualisms between sex (men and women), gender (masculinity and
femininity) and mind / body, and in so doing analyze the ways in
which dominant power relations constitute heteronormativity
throughout organizational history, thereby reinforcing mainstream
management research and teaching. By centring the work of women
writers, this book gives recognition to their thinking and praxis;
each writer making political inroads into changing the lived
experiences of those who have suffered discrimination, exclusion
and marginalization as they consider the ways in which
organizational knowledge has tended to privilege rather than
problematize masculinity, fixity, control, normativity, violence
and discrimination. The themes and authors (Acker, de Beauvoir,
Halberstam, Kosofsky Sedgwick, Kristeva, Yourcenar) covered in this
book are important precisely because they are not generally
encountered in mainstream writing on management and organization
studies. They are significant to the study and analysis of
organizations because they demonstrate how our understanding of
managing and organizing can be transformed when other
voices/bodies/genders write on what it is work, live, lead and
relate to self and others. All the writers turn to the ways in
which individuals matter organizationally, acknowledging that lived
experiences are a source of political and ethical practice. Each
Woman Writer is introduced and analyzed by experts in organization
studies. Further reading and accessible resources are also
identified for those interested in knowing more. This book will be
relevant to students, researchers and practitioners with an
interest in business and management, organizational studies,
critical management studies, gender studies and sociology. Like all
the books in this series, it will also be of interest to anyone who
wants to see, think and act differently.
Spanning the 20th and 21st centuries, the writers considered in
this first book of the Routledge Focus on Women Writers in
Organization Studies series make an important contribution to how
we think about rationality in managing, leading and working. It
provides a space in which to think differently about rationality,
challenging dominant masculine logics while positioning relations
between people centre stage. A critical and intellectually
provocative text, the book provides a nuanced and practical account
of rationality in organizational contexts, making it clear that
women have and continue to write groundbreaking work on the
subject: women like Lillian Moller Gilbreth, who was at the
forefront of developments in scientific management, and Frances
Perkins, who was the first female US cabinet secretary. Both are
important not only for what they achieved but also as illustrations
of the ways in which women have been written out of the accounts of
managing and management thought. This matters not only because
credit is denied to those who deserve it, but also because it
impoverishes our understanding of complex organisational
phenomenon. Where so much extant writing on managing and organizing
is preoccupied with abstract notions of structure, strategy,
metaphor and machines, the writers considered here explain why
effective working and managing is primarily about seeing and
working with people. Writers such as Arlie Hochschild, Mary Parker
Follett and Heather Hoepfl remind us that rationality cannot be
decoupled from emotion or, where a system is to be rationalised,
then it should start with and enhance the lives of people - be
designed with people at the centre. In this sense, the book is not
arguing for a wholesale rejection of rationality. Rather, authors
call on readers to move beyond a preoccupation with rationality for
its own sake, seeing it instead as a useful and highly contestable
aspect of organizational life. Each woman writer is introduced and
analysed by an expert in their field. Further reading and
accessible resources are also identified for those interested in
knowing more. This book will be relevant to students, researchers
and practitioners with an interest in business and management,
organizational studies, critical management studies, gender studies
and sociology. Like all the books in this series, it will also be
of interest to anyone who wants to see, think and act differently.
There is a long tradition of research on politics, power and
exclusion in areas such as sociology, social policy, politics,
women's studies and philosophy. While power has received
considerable attention in mainstream management research and
teaching, it is rarely considered in terms of politics and
exclusion, particularly where the work of women writers is
concerned. This second book in the Routledge Series on Women
Writers in Organization Studies analyses the ways in which women
have theorised and embodied relations of power. Women like Edith
Garrud who, trained in the Japanese art of jujutsu, confronted the
power of the state to champion feminist politics. Others, such as
Beatrice Webb and Alva Myrdal, are shown to have been at the heart
of welfare reforms and social justice movements that responded to
the worst excesses of industrialisation based on considerations of
class and gender. The writing of bell hooks provides a necessarily
uncomfortable account of the ways in which imperialism, white
supremacy and patriarchy inflict unspoken harm, while Hannah
Arendt's work considers the ways in which different modes of
organizing restrict the ability of people to live freely. Taken
together, such writings dispel the myth that work or business can
be separated from the rest of life, a point driven home by Rosabeth
Moss Kanter's observations on the ways in which power and
inequality differentially structure life chances. These writers
challenge us to think again about power, politics and exclusion in
organizational contexts. They provide provocative thinking, which
opens up new avenues for organization theory, practice and social
activism. Each woman writer is introduced and analysed by experts
in organization studies. Further reading and accessible resources
are also identified for those interested in knowing (thinking!)
more. This book will be relevant to students, researchers and
practitioners with an interest in business and management,
organizational studies, critical management studies, gender studies
and sociology. Like all the books in this series, it will also be
interest to anyone who wants to see, think and act differently.
Concise expert guide to a key research topic Unique shortform
premium literature review Essential reading for early career
researchers and established scholars new to the topic
The Routledge Companion to Ethics, Politics and Organizations
synthesizes and extends existing research on ethics in
organizations by explicitly focusing on 'ethico-politics' - where
ethics informs political action. It draws connections between
ethics and politics in and around organizations and the workplace,
examines cutting-edge areas and sets the scene for future research.
Through a wealth of international and multidisciplinary
contributions this volume considers the broad range of ways in
which ethics and politics can be conceived and understood. The
chapters look at various ethical traditions, as well as the
discursive deployment of ethical terminology in organizational
settings, and they also examine large scale political structures
and processes and how they relate to different forms of politics
which affect behaviour in organizations. These many possibilities
are united by a focus on how ethics can be used to inform and
justify the exercise of power in organizations. This collection
will be a valuable reference source for students and researchers
across the disciplines of organizational studies, ethics and
politics.
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, and regular corporate
scandals, there has been a growing concern with the moral and
ethical foundations of business. Often these concerns are limited
to narrow accounts of governance codes, regulatory procedures or
behaviour incentives, which are often characterized by neoliberal
bias underpinned by western masculine logics. This book challenges
these limited accounts of ethics and responsibility. It looks at
the writing of Gayatri C. Spivak who takes globally networked
markets, people and ideas and provides tools to rethink
subjectivity, ethics and corporate governance. Eschewing strict
hierarchical notions of authority and identity, Spivak's work
invites us to consider who speaks for whom and for what in
organizational contexts. Relationality is also to be found in the
radical politics and feminist ethics of Judith Butler who continues
to draw on and develop her account of performativity to interpret
contemporary organizations, management and work. While popular
accounts of corporate ethics often concern themselves with the aims
and actions of those at the top of organizations, Lauren Berlant
focuses on the struggles of those at the bottom of the new social
structures created by contemporary forms of capital. Finally, the
book also considers ecological challenges through the work of Val
Plumwood, who spent a lifetime considering the threats and
responsibilities we face in environmental terms, and developed a
feminist ecological philosophy for understanding social and species
differences. This book will be relevant to students and researchers
across business and management, organizational studies, critical
management studies, gender studies and sociology.
The Routledge Companion to Ethics, Politics and Organizations
synthesizes and extends existing research on ethics in
organizations by explicitly focusing on 'ethico-politics' - where
ethics informs political action. It draws connections between
ethics and politics in and around organizations and the workplace,
examines cutting-edge areas and sets the scene for future research.
Through a wealth of international and multidisciplinary
contributions this volume considers the broad range of ways in
which ethics and politics can be conceived and understood. The
chapters look at various ethical traditions, as well as the
discursive deployment of ethical terminology in organizational
settings, and they also examine large scale political structures
and processes and how they relate to different forms of politics
which affect behaviour in organizations. These many possibilities
are united by a focus on how ethics can be used to inform and
justify the exercise of power in organizations. This collection
will be a valuable reference source for students and researchers
across the disciplines of organizational studies, ethics and
politics.
This third volume in the Routledge Focus on Women Writers in
Organization Studies series challenges us to think again about the
implications of gender, embodiment and fluidity for organizing and
managing. The themes of this book disrupt our understanding of
dualisms between sex (men and women), gender (masculinity and
femininity) and mind / body, and in so doing analyze the ways in
which dominant power relations constitute heteronormativity
throughout organizational history, thereby reinforcing mainstream
management research and teaching. By centring the work of women
writers, this book gives recognition to their thinking and praxis;
each writer making political inroads into changing the lived
experiences of those who have suffered discrimination, exclusion
and marginalization as they consider the ways in which
organizational knowledge has tended to privilege rather than
problematize masculinity, fixity, control, normativity, violence
and discrimination. The themes and authors (Acker, de Beauvoir,
Halberstam, Kosofsky Sedgwick, Kristeva, Yourcenar) covered in this
book are important precisely because they are not generally
encountered in mainstream writing on management and organization
studies. They are significant to the study and analysis of
organizations because they demonstrate how our understanding of
managing and organizing can be transformed when other
voices/bodies/genders write on what it is work, live, lead and
relate to self and others. All the writers turn to the ways in
which individuals matter organizationally, acknowledging that lived
experiences are a source of political and ethical practice. Each
Woman Writer is introduced and analyzed by experts in organization
studies. Further reading and accessible resources are also
identified for those interested in knowing more. This book will be
relevant to students, researchers and practitioners with an
interest in business and management, organizational studies,
critical management studies, gender studies and sociology. Like all
the books in this series, it will also be of interest to anyone who
wants to see, think and act differently.
Bringing together research from critical diversity studies and
organization theory, this edited collection challenges unspoken
norms and patterns of discrimination in organizational bodies. The
authors problematize the management of diversity by focusing on the
differentiations between racialized, aged, gendered and sexed
bodies. By taking a fresh approach and placing the body at the
forefront of power relations, this thought-provoking book seeks to
challenge the homogenizing and oppressive dimensions of
organizational governance, structure and culture that deny bodily
difference. An insightful read for scholars of HRM, diversity
management and organization, Diversity, Affect and Embodiment in
Organizing encourages an active approach to tackling discrimination
and recognizes the diversity of embodied lives.
Despite a substantial body of work arguing for a new form of
writing about management, organisations, workers, ourselves, and
our lives, these calls are ironically made within the traditional
scientific language. This volume of Dialogues in Critical
Management Studies makes an important effort to facilitate the
growth of a nascent movement to write differently and thus
capitalise on the fruitful and creative margins which this opens
up. Writing Differently is a critical, insightful, poetic and
timely collection of essays, poems, plays and auto-ethnographic
pieces that showcases the potential of academic writing. These
texts reflect how writing is not always something we control or
have agency over, demonstrate the multiple ways of expressions that
are possible when we write about that which matters and exhibit the
rich and varied forms of writing that emerge in the processes of
being involved in scholarly work. The volume will be of interest to
those interested in alternative ways of working, researching,
thinking, organizing, writing research and research lives.
Downsizing, delayering, corporate liposuction, lean manufacturing,
empowerment, knowledge management and networked organization have
shaken traditional assumptions about management to their
foundations. Postmodern conditions have fragmented established
identity resources and created a crisis of managerial
self-confidence. Drawing on detailed qualitative studies and theory
on gender and power to explore the impact of recent changes on
managers' identities and their responses in constructing new and
multiple identities, Managing Identity develops much needed models
for evaluating shifts from modern to postmodern management and new
managerial subjectivities.
The purpose of this book is to reimagine the concept of culture,
both as an analytical category and disciplinary practice of
dominance, marginalization and exclusion. For decades culture has
been perceived as a 'hot topic'. It has been written about and
deployed as part of 'a search for excellence'; as a tool through
which to categorise, rank, motivate and mould individuals; as a
part of an attempt to align individual and corporate goals; as a
driver of organizational change, and; as a servant of profit
maximisation. The women writers presented in this book offer a
different take on culture: they offer useful disruptions to
mainstream conceptions of culture. Joanne Martin and Mary Douglas
provide multi-dimensional holistic accounts of social relations
that point up similarity and difference. Rather than offering
totalising or prescriptive models, each author considers the
complex, polyphonic and processual nature of culture(s) while
challenging us to acknowledge and work with ambiguity, fluidity and
disruption. In this spirit writings of Judi Marshall, Arlie
Hochschild, Kathy Ferguson, Luce Irigaray and Donna Haraway are
employed to disrupt extant management cultures that lionise the
masculine and marginalise the concerns, perspectives and
contributions of women and the diversity of women. These writers
bring bodies, emotions, difference, resistance and politics back to
the centre stage of organizational theory and practice. They open
us up to the possibility of cultures suffused with multifarious
potentiality rather than homogeneity and faux certainty. As such,
they offer new ways of understanding and performing culture in
management and organization. This book will be relevant to students
and researchers across business and management, organizational
studies, critical management studies, gender studies and sociology.
Spanning the 20th and 21st centuries, the writers considered in
this first book of the Routledge Focus on Women Writers in
Organization Studies series make an important contribution to how
we think about rationality in managing, leading and working. It
provides a space in which to think differently about rationality,
challenging dominant masculine logics while positioning relations
between people centre stage. A critical and intellectually
provocative text, the book provides a nuanced and practical account
of rationality in organizational contexts, making it clear that
women have and continue to write groundbreaking work on the
subject: women like Lillian Moller Gilbreth, who was at the
forefront of developments in scientific management, and Frances
Perkins, who was the first female US cabinet secretary. Both are
important not only for what they achieved but also as illustrations
of the ways in which women have been written out of the accounts of
managing and management thought. This matters not only because
credit is denied to those who deserve it, but also because it
impoverishes our understanding of complex organisational
phenomenon. Where so much extant writing on managing and organizing
is preoccupied with abstract notions of structure, strategy,
metaphor and machines, the writers considered here explain why
effective working and managing is primarily about seeing and
working with people. Writers such as Arlie Hochschild, Mary Parker
Follett and Heather Hoepfl remind us that rationality cannot be
decoupled from emotion or, where a system is to be rationalised,
then it should start with and enhance the lives of people - be
designed with people at the centre. In this sense, the book is not
arguing for a wholesale rejection of rationality. Rather, authors
call on readers to move beyond a preoccupation with rationality for
its own sake, seeing it instead as a useful and highly contestable
aspect of organizational life. Each woman writer is introduced and
analysed by an expert in their field. Further reading and
accessible resources are also identified for those interested in
knowing more. This book will be relevant to students, researchers
and practitioners with an interest in business and management,
organizational studies, critical management studies, gender studies
and sociology. Like all the books in this series, it will also be
of interest to anyone who wants to see, think and act differently.
There is a long tradition of research on politics, power and
exclusion in areas such as sociology, social policy, politics,
women's studies and philosophy. While power has received
considerable attention in mainstream management research and
teaching, it is rarely considered in terms of politics and
exclusion, particularly where the work of women writers is
concerned. This second book in the Routledge Series on Women
Writers in Organization Studies analyses the ways in which women
have theorised and embodied relations of power. Women like Edith
Garrud who, trained in the Japanese art of jujutsu, confronted the
power of the state to champion feminist politics. Others, such as
Beatrice Webb and Alva Myrdal, are shown to have been at the heart
of welfare reforms and social justice movements that responded to
the worst excesses of industrialisation based on considerations of
class and gender. The writing of bell hooks provides a necessarily
uncomfortable account of the ways in which imperialism, white
supremacy and patriarchy inflict unspoken harm, while Hannah
Arendt's work considers the ways in which different modes of
organizing restrict the ability of people to live freely. Taken
together, such writings dispel the myth that work or business can
be separated from the rest of life, a point driven home by Rosabeth
Moss Kanter's observations on the ways in which power and
inequality differentially structure life chances. These writers
challenge us to think again about power, politics and exclusion in
organizational contexts. They provide provocative thinking, which
opens up new avenues for organization theory, practice and social
activism. Each woman writer is introduced and analysed by experts
in organization studies. Further reading and accessible resources
are also identified for those interested in knowing (thinking!)
more. This book will be relevant to students, researchers and
practitioners with an interest in business and management,
organizational studies, critical management studies, gender studies
and sociology. Like all the books in this series, it will also be
interest to anyone who wants to see, think and act differently.
The academic study of organizations is in a condition of
heterodoxy, where diverse methods and theories collide and compete,
gathered together only in the broken net of a name. This book
assembles some of the bits that break off in the process of this
collision. It plays with the already contested boundaries 'correct
images' and 'correct narratives' of a legitimate organization
studies, so as to attest to a destabilization of any theory and
method that would desire to capture, reproduce, and indoctrinate
knowledge. The book brings together a group of original thinkers
and writers, who push the boundaries of innovative and
unconventional work as governed by prevailing standards in the
dominant bastions of organization studies.
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