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[ecrea] Standing Working Group (SWG) "Organization as Communication".
Mon Oct 27 22:46:48 GMT 2014
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Dear all,
We are very happy to announce that the European Group of Organizational
Studies (EGOS) has approved to launch a new Standing Working Group (SWG)
“Organization as Communication”. The SWG will be coordinated by Dennis
Schoeneborn (Copenhagen Business School), Consuelo Vasquez (UQAM
Montréal), Timothy Kuhn (University of Colorado at Boulder), and
François Cooren (Université de Montréal). The SWG will feature EGOS
sub-themes from 2015-2018 that each will address the formative and
constitutive role of communication for organizations and organizing.
Worth noting, the SWG will provide “Egosians” with a new home for
anybody interested in organizational communication, discourse,
narratives, rhetoric, or tropes. For more information on the new SWG –
see here: http://www.egosnet.org/swgs/current_swgs/swg_16.
At the EGOS 2015 Colloquium in Athens, Greece (July 1-4, 2015), the new
SWG will start its activities by hosting a sub-theme entitled
“Organization as Communication: The Performative Power of Talk”
(convenors: François Cooren, Lars Thøger Christensen, and Dennis
Schoeneborn). While the this sub-theme places a special focus on talk,
we also invite conceptual or empirical papers that, more generally,
apply a communication-centered lens to study organizational phenomena
(for more details, see the Call for Papers below or on the EGOS website:
http://www.egosnet.org/jart/prj3/egos/main.jart?rel=de&reserve-mode=active&content-id=1392376003637&subtheme_id=1368705980214).
We are very much looking forward to your submissions (short papers of
max. 3,000 words) by January 12, 2015!
With kind regards,
Consuelo, François, Lars, Tim, and Dennis
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EGOS 2015 in Athens (Greece), July 1-4, 2015
Sub-theme 16: (SWG) Organization as Communication: The Performative
Power of Talk
Convenors
· François Cooren, Université de Montréal, Canada,
(f.cooren /at/ umontreal.ca)
· Lars Thøger Christensen, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark,
(ltc.ikl /at/ cbs.dk)
· Dennis Schoeneborn, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark,
(dsc.ikl /at/ cbs.dk)
Please submit your short papers (3,000 words max.) by January 12, 2015
via: www.egosnet.org
Call for Papers
This sub-theme is concerned with the fundamental, constitutive, and
formative role of communication for organizations. One way to reflect on
this constitutive role is to focus on the relation between talk and
action. In organization and management studies scholars traditionally
tend to clearly distinguish between "talk" and "action" (e.g., Brunsson,
1989) – a distinction that is found in colloquial use, too (Grant et
al., 1998). The basic assumption is that "talk is cheap" and easy to do,
since it oftentimes lacks alignment with action, i.e. the "real" and
hands-on accomplishments.
Regarded as a source of hypocrisy, the decoupling or misalignment of
talk and action (inc. the mere ceremonial compliance with stakeholder
expectations) is seen as a threat to both an organization's efficiency
and legitimacy. However, as recent works from organizational
communication studies remind us, a clear-cut distinction between "talk"
and "action" is problematic, given that talk is an action in its own
right (e.g., Ashcraft et al., 2009). This is because language and
communication not only reflect, but also reflexively participate in the
constitution of reality (Robichaud & Cooren, 2013). Proponents of this
perspective argue that language use always has a "performative
character", i.e. by talking a reality into being that would not exist if
the interaction had not taken place. For instance, in a recent paper,
Christensen, Morsing, & Thyssen (2013) apply the idea of the
performative nature of language use to the context of corporate social
responsibility (CSR). The authors argue that although differences
between "talk" and "action" in the CSR arena are usually seen as
hypocritical, such differences can be part of an organization's
"aspirational talk", which represents an important resource for
organizational and social change (see also Haack et al., 2012).
In this sub-theme, we invite papers that help reflect upon and go beyond
oversimplified distinctions between talk and action, that seek to
further explore the performative dimension of language use in
organizational contexts, or that aim to address the relations between
communication and organization more generally.
Below is a list of indicative, but not exhaustive, topics and questions
related to the sub-theme:
* What are the implications for organization theory if the
distinction between talk and action is problematized?
* What role does talk (or other forms of communication, e.g.,
textual, architectural, technological, etc.) play in the constitution of
organizations?
* What forms of talk do we find in organizational practice – and
how do they differ in shaping and constituting organizational phenomena?
* How does talk get “materialized” in organizational practice
(e.g., through texts) and can gain more stable character?
* Under which boundary conditions is it likely that "aspirational
talk" (Christensen et al., 2013) paves the way for its own fulfillment?
* What methodologies are best suited to study the formative role of
communication for organizations?
References
* Ashcraft, K.L., Kuhn, T.R., & Cooren, F. (2009): "Constitutional
amendments: 'Materializing' organizational communication." Academy of
Management Annals, 3 (1), 1–64.
* Brunsson, N. (1989): The Organization of Hypocrisy: Talk,
Decisions, and Actions in Organizations. New York, NY: Wiley.
* Christensen, L.T., Morsing, M., & Thyssen, O. (2013): "CSR as
aspirational talk." Organization, 20 (3), 372–393.
* Grant, D., Keenoy, T.W., & Oswick, C. (eds.) (1998): Discourse
and Organization. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications.
* Haack, P., Schoeneborn, D., & Wickert, C. (2012): "Talking the
talk, moral entrapment, creeping commitment? Exploring narrative
dynamics in corporate responsibility standardization." Organization
Studies, 33 (5-6), 813–845.
* Robichaud, D., & Cooren, F. (eds.) (2013): Organization and
Organizing: Materiality, Agency and Discourse. Mahwah, NJ: Routledge.
François Cooren is Professor and Chair of the Department of
Communication at the Université de Montréal, Canada. His work has been
published in the 'Academy of Management Annals', 'Communication Theory',
'Human Relations', 'Management Communication Quarterly', 'Organization',
and 'Organization Studies', amongst others. His research interests lie
in the study of organizational communication, language and social
interaction, and communication theory.
Lars Thøger Christensen is Professor at the Department of Intercultural
Communication and Management at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. His
work has been published in 'Organization Studies', 'Human Relations',
'Management Communication Quarterly', and 'Organization', amongst
others. His research interests circle around the question of how
organizations deliberately (or otherwise) construct significant
realities for themselves and others through communication, in areas such
as CSR, transparency and organizational identity.
Dennis Schoeneborn is Professor (MSO) at the Department of Intercultural
Communication and Management at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. His
work has been published in 'Organization Studies', 'Management
Communication Quarterly', and the 'Journal of Management Inquiry',
amongst others. His current research concerns the question how
communication constitutes rudimentary and partial organizational phenomena.
Lars Thøger Christensen, Ph.d.
Professor
Department of Intercultural Communication and Management
Copenhagen Business School
Porcelænshaven 18A
2000 Frederiksberg
Danmark
E-mail: (ltc.ikl /at/ cbs.dk)
Phone: (+45) 38153299
Cell: (+45) 60112122
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