ABSTRACT

This book is a reaction to the reductionist and exploitative ideas dominating the mainstream contemporary management discourse and practice, and an attempt to broaden the horizons of possibility for both managers and organization scholars. It brings together the scholarly fields of humanistic management and organizational aesthetics, where the former brings in the unshakeable focus on the human condition and concern for dignity, emancipation, and the common good, while the latter promotes reflection, openness, and appreciation for irreducible complexity of existence. It is a journey towards wholeness undertaken by a collective of management and organization theorists, philosophers, artists, and art curators.

Reading this book’s contributions can help both academics and practitioners work towards building organizational practices aimed at (re)acquiring wholeness by developing aesthetic awareness allowing for more profound understandings of performativity, insights into the dynamics of power, appreciation of ambiguity and ambivalence, and a much needed grasp of complexity. The varied ways of engaging with art explored by the authors promote imaginative insights into and reflection on the beauty and vicissitudes of organizing, of management knowledge and collective expression.

It will be of interest to researchers, academics, practitioners, and students in the fields of organizational theory and practice, business and management history, human resource management, and culture management.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

Understanding Organizing and the Quest for Wholeness

chapter 2|11 pages

Art and Organizing

A Brief Personal Reflection

chapter 3|9 pages

The Incompleteness Theorem

The Importance of Reinterpretation in Management Studies

chapter 4|16 pages

Hula Hoops and Cigars, Hiccups and Stutters

Thinking with Film about Organizational Control

chapter 6|14 pages

Conformity and the Need for Roots

Two Anarchist Utopias and a Christian Politeia

chapter 8|18 pages

Rooted in Transitory Places of Gathering

Performing Spacing in Tino Sehgal’s Performance “These Situations” at the Palais de Tokyo 1

chapter 9|17 pages

Aesthetic Learning in an Artistic Intervention Project for Organizational Creativity

Accepting Feelings of Uncertainty, Anxiety, and Fun

chapter 10|21 pages

The Art of Creating the Unthinkable

Connecting Processes of Engineering, Management, and Aesthetics

chapter 11|22 pages

Monuments to Enterprises in Communist-era Poland

The Creation and Consolidation of an Organizational Identity through Art

chapter 12|17 pages

The Lure of the East in the Empires of Sight

Does Changing Ownership of Colonial Art Challenge the Notion of Being “Colonized by the Gaze”?

chapter 13|13 pages

Exercises in Sensemaking

3,628,800 Ways of Writing Organization and Management

chapter 15|17 pages

Prologue to Filmic Research(ing)