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ArtikelThe Emergence Of A Surrealist Movement And Its Vital ‘Estrangement-Effect’ In Organization Studies  
Oleh: Zanetti, Lisa A. ; Carr, Adrian N.
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: Human Relations vol. 53 no. 7 (Jul. 2000), page 891–921.
Topik: critical theory; dialectic; estrangement; organization studies; postmodernism; surrealism
Fulltext: 891.pdf (2.96MB)
Isi artikelBeginning as a subversive and anti-establishment movement in France in the 1920s, surrealism was primarily a movement whose ‘voice’ came through the written word. Later the movement extended into the visual arts, with which it is more generally associated. Surrealism was always intended as a way of thinking, a way of feeling and, indeed, a philosophy of life. This way of thinking now appears to have permeated the discourse of organization theory in both the orientation and ‘techniques’ that are advocated by a group of writers who claim, or invoke, the insights of postmodernists (/poststructuralists). Drawing on recently published work by the critical theorists Adorno, Benjamin and Marcuse, we argue that the field needs to consider carefully ‘its’ response to all ‘surrealist movements’. We argue that the surrealist movement is an essential part of a healthy ongoing dialectic for the field and needs to be recognized in exactly that context.
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