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Full Description
Time, timing, and temporality are inherently important to organizational process studies, yet time remains an under-theorized construct that has struggled to move much beyond chronological conceptions of "clock" time. Missing from this linear view are ongoing debates about objectivity versus subjectivity in the experience of time, linear versus alternative structures of time, or an appreciation of collective or culturally determined inferences of temporality. This is critical as our understanding of time and temporality can shape how we view and relate to organizational phenomena, either as unfolding processes or stable objects.
History is equally important. While we have an intuitive sense of history as a process, organizational theorists have struggled to move beyond two limited conceptualizations: history as a constraint on organization's capacity for change, or history as a unique source of competitive advantage. Both approaches suffer from the restrictive view of history as an objective set of "brute facts" that are exterior to the individuals, organizations, and collectives that experience them. Yet management theory is acquiring an awareness of time, history, and memory as critical elements in processes of organizing. This volume draws together emerging strands of interest in adopting a more nuanced orientation toward time, temporality, and history to better understand the temporal aspects of organizational processes.
Contents
1: Juliane Reinecke, Roy Suddaby, Ann Langley, and Haridimos Tsoukas: Time, Temporality and History in Process Organization Studies
2: William Blattner: Temporality, Aspect, and Narrative: A Heideggerian Approach
3: Tor Hernes: Events and the Becoming of Organizational Temporality
4: Eviatar Zerubavel: The Sociology of Time
5: Anthony Hussenot, Tor Hernes, and Isabelle Bouty: Studying Organization From the Perspective of the Ontology of Temporality: Introducing the Events-Based Approach
6: Barbara Simpson, Rory Tracey, and Alia Weston: The Timefulness of Creativity in an Accelerating World
7: Arne Lindseth Bygdås, Aina Landsverk Hagen, Ingrid M. Tolstad, and Gudrun Rudningen Skjælaaen: Flowline at Work: Transforming Temporalities in News Organizations Through Metaphor
8: Lena E. Bygballe, Anna R. Swärd, Anne Live Vaagaasar: Temporal Shaping of Routine Patterning
9: Frithjof E. Wegener and Philippe Lorino: Capturing the Experience of Living Forward from Within the Flow: Fusing "Withness" Approach & Pragmatist Inquiry
10: John Hassard, Stephanie Decker, and Michael Rowlinson: Organizational Time in Historical Perspective
11: Németh Bongers Diane Ella: Historical Consciousness as a Management Tool
12: Henrik Koll and Astrid Jensen: Appropriating the Past in Organizational Change Management: Abandoning and Embracing History
13: William M. Foster, Elden M. Wiebe, Diego M. Coraiola, François Bastien, and Roy Suddaby: Memory-Work: Corporate Archivists and Long-Term Remembering in Organizations
14: Andrew David Allan Smith: Rhetorical History, Historical Metanarratives, and Rhetorical Effectiveness
15: David Musson: The Life and Work of Edith Penrose: Appreciating the Classics in Temporal and Historical Perspective