Journal article 895 views
After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’
C Rhodes,
Carl Rhodes
Organization Studies, Volume: 30, Issue: 6, Pages: 654 - 672
Swansea University Author: Carl Rhodes
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/0170840609104804
Abstract
<p id="p-1">Building on existing considerations of reflexivity in research writing, this essai seeks to reappraise the concept of responsibility in relation to the ethics of post-representational research methodology in organization studies. Jacques Derrida's discussions of resp...
Published in: | Organization Studies |
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Sage
2010
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Online Access: |
http://oss.sagepub.com/content/30/6/653.short |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa5215 |
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2018-02-09T04:31:20Z |
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2011-10-01T00:00:00.0000000 v2 5215 2011-10-01 After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ 6323f8c559e113b1ead52a0e6bb00043 Carl Rhodes Carl Rhodes true false 2011-10-01 <p id="p-1">Building on existing considerations of reflexivity in research writing, this essai seeks to reappraise the concept of responsibility in relation to the ethics of post-representational research methodology in organization studies. Jacques Derrida's discussions of responsibility and undecidability and Emmanuel Lévinas' distinction between the <em>saying</em> and the <em>said</em> are brought to bear on the ethics of the discursive construction of organizational research as a form of representing the Other. The essai argues that responding to reflexivity extends beyond textual practice and self-accounting towards a responsibility for the exercise of academic freedom. This freedom entails a radical openness that is operationalized in an ongoing reinvention that resists the institutionalization of the field of inquiry through a form of transformative knowledge. It is the legacy and promise of reflexivity in organization studies that can invigorate the imagination in research — its poiesis — as an ongoing project of saying the ethical.</p> Journal Article Organization Studies 30 6 654 672 Sage 31 12 2010 2010-12-31 10.1177/0170840609104804 http://oss.sagepub.com/content/30/6/653.short COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University 2011-10-01T00:00:00.0000000 2011-10-01T00:00:00.0000000 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Management - Business Management C Rhodes 1 Carl Rhodes 2 |
title |
After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ |
spellingShingle |
After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ Carl Rhodes |
title_short |
After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ |
title_full |
After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ |
title_fullStr |
After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ |
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After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ |
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After Reflexivity: Ethics and the Writing of Organization Studies’ |
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6323f8c559e113b1ead52a0e6bb00043 |
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6323f8c559e113b1ead52a0e6bb00043_***_Carl Rhodes |
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Carl Rhodes |
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C Rhodes Carl Rhodes |
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Organization Studies |
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10.1177/0170840609104804 |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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School of Management - Business Management{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Management - Business Management |
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<p id="p-1">Building on existing considerations of reflexivity in research writing, this essai seeks to reappraise the concept of responsibility in relation to the ethics of post-representational research methodology in organization studies. Jacques Derrida's discussions of responsibility and undecidability and Emmanuel Lévinas' distinction between the <em>saying</em> and the <em>said</em> are brought to bear on the ethics of the discursive construction of organizational research as a form of representing the Other. The essai argues that responding to reflexivity extends beyond textual practice and self-accounting towards a responsibility for the exercise of academic freedom. This freedom entails a radical openness that is operationalized in an ongoing reinvention that resists the institutionalization of the field of inquiry through a form of transformative knowledge. It is the legacy and promise of reflexivity in organization studies that can invigorate the imagination in research — its poiesis — as an ongoing project of saying the ethical.</p> |
published_date |
2010-12-31T06:09:27Z |
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11.070971 |