On the Idea of Emancipation in Management and Organization Studies
- 1 July 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Academy of Management in Academy of Management Review
- Vol. 17 (3) , 432-464
- https://doi.org/10.2307/258718
Abstract
The article reconceptualizes the meaning of emancipation in management and organization studies and develops an approach that (a) takes into account recent criticism of its "totalizing" tendencies raised by poststructuralists and (b) makes it more sensitive to the particularities of-and thereby more relevant for-management studies. The first part of the article reviews and discusses tendencies in critical theory toward negativism, essentialism, and intellectualism. The second part reformulates the grand enterprise of emancipation into a more modest project, scaled down in terms of scope and ambition. The third part discusses ways of advancing this project in terms of listening, writing, and reading.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deconstructing Organizational Taboos: The Suppression of Gender Conflict in OrganizationsOrganization Science, 1990
- Postmodernism as Social Theory: Some Challenges and ProblemsTheory, Culture & Society, 1988
- EXCELLENT COMPANIES AS SOCIAL MOVEMENTS[1]Journal of Management Studies, 1986
- A Critical Theory of Organization ScienceAcademy of Management Review, 1986
- Practical and Emancipatory Interests in Organizational Symbolism: A Review and EvaluationJournal of Management, 1985
- One-Dimensional Management Science: The Making of a Technocratic ConsciousnessInterfaces, 1984
- Planning in the Face of PowerJournal of the American Planning Association, 1982