posted on 2017-03-07, 16:25authored bySteven D. Brown, Paula Reavey
Institutions and organizations are defined by competing sociomaterial logics.
Divergence between the ‘visible’ and the ‘hidden’ side of organization invites a
critical work of ‘unveiling’. But such critique does not enable understanding of
how coherency is accomplished between different modes of reason. This is
performed in emergent third spaces, where parasitic relations are enacted.
During moments of ‘crisis’ or ‘breach’, contradictions are both acknowledged and
given concrescence. Management comes into being in the anticipation of its
breaking. Four accounts of this process are offered – a discussion of a remark
from Michel Serres’s The Parasite, a description of China Miélville’s novel The
City and The City, stories from fieldwork in medium-secure forensic psychiatric
units, and set of conceptual propositions. Together they perform a descriptive
practice called ‘dark organization theory’ which analyses the functional aspects
of divergence and breaking in management and organizational practices.
History
Citation
Journal of Cultural Economy, 2017
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Management
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