How Speech Acting and the Struggle of Narratives Generate Organization seeks to shed understanding on how speaking or speech-acting affects how we are organized and how we influence each other and wield power. It is suggested that speaking is a major clue to organization and to the creation of new organizations. The task is to describe how speech-acting organizes. This book takes findings in the project’s philosophy of collective intentions – its philosophy of society – into the field of empirical study of organization and politics. The book investigates the relation between knowledge and politics, between describing the world and changing it, between cognitive – sensing - and volitional – wilful – processes and goes on to describe how speech-acting organizes, reorganizes - and destroys organizations. It looks at persons and groups as speech-actors. It investigates how speech-acting can spur movements in organizations from routines to learning to innovations and backHow Speech Acting and the Struggle of Narratives Generate Organization develops a model of how speech-acting generates new organization – or social innovations. Empirical studies of some economic, political and ideological organizations are mined for model development. Speech-acting occurs in the context of institutions, with capital producing firms and nation states at present as the most ubiquitous. But speech-acting has an element of freedom that makes some of its results unpredictable and difficult to control. Aimed at academics, researchers and students in the field of Organizational Studies How Speech Acting and the Struggle of Narratives Generate Organization examines a new contribution and direction in the field.
Thorvald Gran is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Bergen, Norway.
Part 1: Questions and Approach1. Questions and Approach. Some Hypotheses. Some Already Suggested Answers2. A Realistic Paradigm3. Problem, Materials and Methods of Analysis4. Questions of Speech-Acts, Narrative Struggles and the Organization of Norwegian FisheriesPart 2: How Speech-Acting in Context Organizes5. The Language Institution6. Speech-Acting, Narratives and Organization7. How Institutions and Institutional Dynamics Affect Reasoning in the GapPart 3: Struggles Over Organizing8. Competing Narratives of the Firm in a Capital Producing Market Economy9. The Speech Act Theory of Innovativeness and Innovations10. Discourse Mode Changes in Organizations and SocietiesPart 4: Political and Private Organization. Narratives, Identities and Power in Norwegian Fisheries11. From Private to Public and Political Power12. The Speech Act Theory of Organization and New Technology in Norwegian FisheriesPart 5: The Pressure for Democracy13. The Narrativity of Leadership and Management in Organizations14. How Competing Ideas of Society Permeate Organizations, Daily Life and Personalities in Norwegian FisheriesConclusion
Alan McKinlay, Eric Pezet, UK) McKinlay, Alan (Newcastle University, France) Pezet, Eric (Professor in Organizational Theory and human Resource Management at the University of Paris Ouest Nanterre La Defense, Alan Mckinlay