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Organizational entrepreneurship : an art of the weak?

Hjorth, Daniel LU (2012) p.169-190
Abstract

It seems to me that the late-modern emblematic subjectivity of industrial economy – the manager – emerged as the emblematic manifestation as well as guardian of these ‘agents of production’ Foucault mentions in the opening quote. From F. W. Taylor onwards (although inherited from much earlier sources), the manager’s agency was constituted by the power to negate disorder, to instigate control, and to say ‘yes’ to carrying the ever-greater load of adjusting to modifications in the environment for the purpose of greater efficiency. Establishing the manageable organization and employee, central to the industrial age, ‘gave rise to a series of knowledges – a knowledge of the individual, of normalization, a corrective knowledge – that... (More)

It seems to me that the late-modern emblematic subjectivity of industrial economy – the manager – emerged as the emblematic manifestation as well as guardian of these ‘agents of production’ Foucault mentions in the opening quote. From F. W. Taylor onwards (although inherited from much earlier sources), the manager’s agency was constituted by the power to negate disorder, to instigate control, and to say ‘yes’ to carrying the ever-greater load of adjusting to modifications in the environment for the purpose of greater efficiency. Establishing the manageable organization and employee, central to the industrial age, ‘gave rise to a series of knowledges – a knowledge of the individual, of normalization, a corrective knowledge – that proliferated in these institutions of infrapower, causing the so-called human sciences, and man as an object of science, to appear’ (ibid.) How can we think organizational entrepreneurship differently as we are now, at the dawn of postindustrialism, looking for the creative/innovative rather than merely ‘manageable organizations’ (Taylor, 1911; Mayo, 1923; 1924; 1933; 1945; Simon, 1945; Becker, 1964; Chandler, 1977; Porter, 1980; 1985)? Rather than engaging in a critique of the complex matrix of knowledge/power that has shaped practice and understanding of organizations in late-industrial economy, I want to write for a new understanding.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Handbook on Organisational Entrepreneurship
editor
Hjorth, Daniel
pages
22 pages
publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing
external identifiers
  • scopus:84881956297
ISBN
9781849803786
9781781009055
DOI
10.4337/9781781009055.00019
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © Daniel Hjorth 2012. All rights reserved.
id
ee0eaa3b-83e9-4681-a4f3-40835a43261c
date added to LUP
2024-02-26 14:46:29
date last changed
2024-04-11 20:08:00
@inbook{ee0eaa3b-83e9-4681-a4f3-40835a43261c,
  abstract     = {{<p>It seems to me that the late-modern emblematic subjectivity of industrial economy – the manager – emerged as the emblematic manifestation as well as guardian of these ‘agents of production’ Foucault mentions in the opening quote. From F. W. Taylor onwards (although inherited from much earlier sources), the manager’s agency was constituted by the power to negate disorder, to instigate control, and to say ‘yes’ to carrying the ever-greater load of adjusting to modifications in the environment for the purpose of greater efficiency. Establishing the manageable organization and employee, central to the industrial age, ‘gave rise to a series of knowledges – a knowledge of the individual, of normalization, a corrective knowledge – that proliferated in these institutions of infrapower, causing the so-called human sciences, and man as an object of science, to appear’ (ibid.) How can we think organizational entrepreneurship differently as we are now, at the dawn of postindustrialism, looking for the creative/innovative rather than merely ‘manageable organizations’ (Taylor, 1911; Mayo, 1923; 1924; 1933; 1945; Simon, 1945; Becker, 1964; Chandler, 1977; Porter, 1980; 1985)? Rather than engaging in a critique of the complex matrix of knowledge/power that has shaped practice and understanding of organizations in late-industrial economy, I want to write for a new understanding.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hjorth, Daniel}},
  booktitle    = {{Handbook on Organisational Entrepreneurship}},
  editor       = {{Hjorth, Daniel}},
  isbn         = {{9781849803786}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{169--190}},
  publisher    = {{Edward Elgar Publishing}},
  title        = {{Organizational entrepreneurship : an art of the weak?}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/9781781009055.00019}},
  doi          = {{10.4337/9781781009055.00019}},
  year         = {{2012}},
}