RESEARCH STRATEGIES FOR ORGANIZATIONAL HISTORY: A DIALOGUE BETWEEN HISTORICAL THEORY AND ORGANIZATION THEORY
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Rowlinson, Michael; Hassard, John; Decker, Stephanie
署名单位:
University of London; Queen Mary University London; University of Manchester; Aston University
刊物名称:
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT REVIEW
ISSN/ISSBN:
0363-7425
DOI:
10.5465/amr.2012.0203
发表日期:
2014
页码:
250-274
关键词:
TEACHING HISTORY
BUSINESS HISTORY
management
RECONCEPTUALIZATION
HISTORIOGRAPHY
experience
narratives
EVOLUTION
origins
schools
摘要:
If history matters for organization theory, then we need greater reflexivity regarding the epistemological problem of representing the past; otherwise, history might be seen as merely a repository of ready-made data. To facilitate this reflexivity, we set out three epistemological dualisms derived from historical theory to explain the relationship between history and organization theory: (1) in the dualism of explanation, historians are preoccupied with narrative construction, whereas organization theorists subordinate narrative to analysis; (2) in the dualism of evidence, historians use verifiable documentary sources, whereas organization theorists prefer con., structed data; and (3) in the dualism of temporality, historians construct their own periodization, whereas organization theorists treat time as Constant for chronology. These three dualisms underpin our explication of four alternative research strategies for organizational history: corporate history, consisting of a holistic, objectivist narrative of a corporate entity; analytically structured history, narrating theoretically conceptualized structures and events; serial history, using replicable techniques to analyze repeatable facts; and ethnographic history, reading documentary sources against the grain. Ultimately, we argue that our epistemological dualisms will enable organization theorists to justify their theoretical stance in relation to a range of strategies in organizational history, including narratives constructed from documentary sources found in organizational archives.