Journal article 1668 views 263 downloads
The Moral Work of Subversion.
Human Relations, Volume: 69, Issue: 1, Pages: 5 - 31
Swansea University Author: Paul White
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/0018726715576041
Abstract
This paper engages critically with dominant understandings of morality and subversion within organizations and through a close examination of existing organisational literature. We show how contemporary organisational literature fails to adequately adequately address the ways in which a given '...
Published in: | Human Relations |
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2016
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa21898 |
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2019-09-23T11:39:15.3509691 v2 21898 2015-06-02 The Moral Work of Subversion. 5dad17680576ad766df177ee22c54199 0000-0002-6562-4696 Paul White Paul White true false 2015-06-02 CBAE This paper engages critically with dominant understandings of morality and subversion within organizations and through a close examination of existing organisational literature. We show how contemporary organisational literature fails to adequately adequately address the ways in which a given 'morality' produces and justifies everyday subversive practices an the means through which it legitimates and stabilises already existing power relations within organisations. Developing work from interactionist sociology, we highlight the means through which subversion legitimates the diverse range of actions performed by organizational subjects through processes of post hoc rationalisation. This rationalisation is of itself a particular form of retrospective reasoning referred to as ‘moralization’, which forms a resource for subjects to actively negotiate the often competing moral and practical demands placed on them as organizational subjects. Subversion, within our analysis represents an important means of accomplishing, legitimating and preserving a given organizational order, rather than assume subversion necessarily subverts organizational values. It is through a close analysis of organisational and theoretical literature that we show the ‘positive’ function of rule-bending for enabling and sedimenting processes of organizational control. Journal Article Human Relations 69 1 5 31 control, interactionism, management, moralization, moral order, organizational theory, rule-bending, subversion 15 1 2016 2016-01-15 10.1177/0018726715576041 COLLEGE NANME Management School COLLEGE CODE CBAE Swansea University 2019-09-23T11:39:15.3509691 2015-06-02T10:54:36.5229337 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Management - Accounting and Finance P.N. Bloom 1 P.J. White 2 Paul White 0000-0002-6562-4696 3 0021898-17122015114019.pdf WhiteTheMoralWorkofSubversionPostprint.pdf 2015-12-17T11:40:19.3830000 Output 592123 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2015-12-17T00:00:00.0000000 false |
title |
The Moral Work of Subversion. |
spellingShingle |
The Moral Work of Subversion. Paul White |
title_short |
The Moral Work of Subversion. |
title_full |
The Moral Work of Subversion. |
title_fullStr |
The Moral Work of Subversion. |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Moral Work of Subversion. |
title_sort |
The Moral Work of Subversion. |
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5dad17680576ad766df177ee22c54199_***_Paul White |
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Paul White |
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P.N. Bloom P.J. White Paul White |
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Human Relations |
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This paper engages critically with dominant understandings of morality and subversion within organizations and through a close examination of existing organisational literature. We show how contemporary organisational literature fails to adequately adequately address the ways in which a given 'morality' produces and justifies everyday subversive practices an the means through which it legitimates and stabilises already existing power relations within organisations. Developing work from interactionist sociology, we highlight the means through which subversion legitimates the diverse range of actions performed by organizational subjects through processes of post hoc rationalisation. This rationalisation is of itself a particular form of retrospective reasoning referred to as ‘moralization’, which forms a resource for subjects to actively negotiate the often competing moral and practical demands placed on them as organizational subjects. Subversion, within our analysis represents an important means of accomplishing, legitimating and preserving a given organizational order, rather than assume subversion necessarily subverts organizational values. It is through a close analysis of organisational and theoretical literature that we show the ‘positive’ function of rule-bending for enabling and sedimenting processes of organizational control. |
published_date |
2016-01-15T18:47:16Z |
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1821432334034927616 |
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11.047609 |