Front cover image for Do organizations have feelings?

Do organizations have feelings?

This book argues that adequate explanation of the way that organizations function for those engaged in business and those who study it must transcend the traditional divide between reason and emotion.
Print Book, English, 1997
Routledge, London, 1997
XIII, 184 p. ; 22 cm
9780415115469, 9780415115476, 0415115469, 0415115477
912152263
INTRODUCTION: THE NECESSITY FOR THE SOCIOLOGY OF ORGANIZING Big ideas; small sciences. Passing fashions, enduring problems, For a pragmatic universalism, Persisting sociology Part I Objectivity and reflexivity 1 THE STUDY OF ORGANIZATIONS—OBJECTIVITY OR BIAS? 2 THE DIALECTIC OF SCIENCE AND VALUES IN THE STUDY OF ORGANIZATIONS 2.1 Utility: organizational science as technology 2.2 Relativity and reality: fundamental assumptions in the study of organizations 2.3 Reflexivity: organizations as theoretical constructs 2.4 Conclusion Part II Reassessing Weber for current uses 3 THE APPLICATION OF THE WEBERIAN CONCEPT OF RATIONALIZATION TO CONTEMPORARY CONDITIONS 3.1 Developing the rationalization thesis 3.2 Two contemporary cases of rationalization 3.3 The bounds of rationality 4 REDEFINING AUTHORITY FOR POST-WEBERIAN CONDITIONS 4.1 The pivotal place of legal-rational authority in modernity 4.2 On not amending Weber’s concept of authority 4.3 Changing concepts for a changed world 4.4 A concept of authority for postmodern organizing Part III Feeling for new organization 5 SINE IRA ET STUDIO—OR DO ORGANIZATIONS HAVE FEELINGS? 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Organization before bureaucracy 5.3 The Weber puzzle 5.4 Passionate bureaucrats and loving entrepreneurs 5.5 A theoretical site for feelings 5.6 Conclusion 6 REVISING ACCOUNTS OF ORGANIZATIONAL FEELING 6.1 Researching emotionality in organizations 6.2 Organizational goals 6.3 Task performance 6.4 Communication and situational logics 6.5 Emotions and organizational structure Part IV Organizing returns from the social 7 SOCIOLOGY FOR POSTMODERN ORGANIZERS—WORKING THE NET with Neil Washbourne 7.1 Sociology and the social reality of organization 7 2 Three old modern benchmarks for the social 7.3 Environmentalism as postmodern organization 7.4 Organizing work 7.5 Social change narrative 7.6 The Net and recoveries of the social 8 SOCIOLOGY FOR ORGANIZATION IN THE GLOBAL AGE 8.1 The non-modernity of the sociology of organization 8.2 Deconstructing the theory of the modern organization 8.3 Postmodern organizing or the sociology of postmodernity 8.4 The postmodern condition of organization 8.5 Epochal change and organizational narratives