141 research outputs found
Towards a Butlerian methodology: undoing organizational performativity through anti-narrative research
This article explores the methodological possibilities that Butlerâs theory of performativity opens up, attempting to âtranslateâ her theoretical ideas into research practice. Specifically, it considers how research on organizational subjectivity premised upon a performative ontology might be undertaken. It asks: What form might a Butler-inspired methodology take? What methodological opportunities might it afford for developing self-reflexive research? What political and ethical problems might it pose for organizational researchers, particularly in relation to the challenges associated with power asymmetries, and the risks attached to âfixingâ subjects within the research process? The article outlines and evaluates a method described as âanti-narrativeâ interviewing, arguing that it constitutes a potentially valuable methodological resource for researchers interested in understanding how and why idealized organizational subjectivities are formed and sustained. It further advances the in-roads that Butlerâs writing has made into organization studies, thinking through the methodological and ethical implications of her work for understanding the performative constitution of organizational subjectivities. The aim of the paper is to advocate a research practice premised upon a reflexive undoing of organizational subjectivities and the normative conditions upon which they depend. It concludes by emphasizing the potential benefits and wider implications of a methodologically reflexive undoing of organizational performativity
âTrust me I am a Football Agentâ. The discursive practices of the playersâ agents in (un)professional football
While the public and media attention is largely focused on the corruption scandals of high-ranking officials in international football, FIFAâs decision in April 2015 to deregulate football agents raises further concerns about its ability for self-regulation and governance.
FIFAâs introduction (2006) and subsequent updating (2008, 2015) of its regulations and legal frameworks governing the activity of agents in professional football has important implications on the inner workings of international football. In this regard, FIFAâs decision to deregulate the industry is perhaps a reflection of the neoliberal influences surrounding the organisation to let the agents govern themselves and deal with the wrongdoings of the alleged bribery, exploitation and trafficking of young players. However, the deregulation of agents by FIFA can also be seen as the organisationâs inefficiency to maintain the primacy of self-regulation and self-governance in serious matters of the industry, such as agentsâ global leadership and regulation of practices.
This paper, using qualitative data collected from players, agents and managers from professional football leagues in the UK and Ireland, aims to uncover the unethical, extremely complex and deceptive sides of the agentsâ industry. By doing so, it aims to emphasise the need for gold standards of practice and leadership in the regulation of international football, which desperately needs to restore its integrity.
Two key issues are unpacked: (i) the alleged (un)ethical behaviour of football agents that provokes so much hostility in the football world; (ii) the power shift(s) from clubs and managers to agents and players and the implications these may have on the ethics of the business practices in football
The quiet editor: Ivan VladislaviÄ and South African cultural production
This article examines the literary and sociological significance of Ivan VladislaviÄâs "double lifeâ (Lahire, 2010: n.p.) as both editor and writer. With reference to a number of his editorial roles as well as the joint projects he has worked on with writers and visual artists, the article considers how VladislaviÄâs work with others spreads symbolic value. Described by one of his clients as the âquiet editorâ, VladislaviÄ can be read as a new kind of author; what he terms âcreative editingâ (Steyn, 2012: n.p.) as a new kind of writing, through which more traditional models of authorship and literary production are thrown into question â less Bourdieuâs (1984) âfield of literary productionâ or Casanovaâs (2004: 82) âworld literary spaceâ, red in tooth and claw, amd more Howard Beckerâs âart worldâ: a convivial ânetwork of cooperating people, all of whose work is essential to the final outcomeâ (1982: 25)
Halloween, Organization, and the Ethics of Uncanny Celebration
This article examines the relationship between organizational ethics, the uncanny, and the annual celebration of Halloween. We begin by exploring the traditional and contemporary organizational function of Halloween as âtension-management ritualâ (Etzioni, Sociol Theory 18(1):44â59, 2000) through which collective fears, anxieties, and fantasies are played out and given material expression. Combining the uncanny with the folkloric concept of ostension, we then examine an incident in which UK supermarket retailers made national news headlines for selling offensive Halloween costumes depicting âescaped mental patientsâ. Rather than treating this incident as a problem of moral hygieneâin which products are removed, apologies made, and lessons learnedâwe consider the value of Halloween as a unique and disruptive ethical encounter with the uncanny Other. Looking beyond its commercial appeal and controversy, we reflect on the creative, generous, and disruptive potential of Halloween as both tension-management ritual and unique organizational space of hospitality through which to receive and embrace alterity and so discover the homely within the unheimlich
Postural control anomalies in children with Tourette syndrome
The goal of the present study was to determine whether postural control is affected in Gilles-de-la-Tourette syndrome (TS). Center of pressure (COP) displacements were recorded in children with TS and unaffected siblings (7-16 yrs) in three conditions using a force platform: 1) Eyes-Open, 2) Eyes-Closed, 3) One-Leg standing with eyes open. The COP range and velocity were higher in children with TS than in unaffected siblings in all conditions. These differences could not be attributed to age, present tic severity, comorbidities (hyperactivity and compulsions) or medication. The data suggest that sub-clinical postural control anomalies are present in TS
- âŠ