Abstract
This paper sets out to contribute to the discourse on the role of sociomateriality in enabling and/or constraining organizing processes. Scholars have emphasized that organizing processes include moments of order, as well as disorder, and that those moments emerge through the imbrication of human and material agencies. However there is a lack of insight into how human and material agencies are imbricated during the emergence of (dis)order, and how different imbrications lead to (dis)order. This paper addresses this gap by presenting a content analysis of a book reporting the Battle of Stalingrad during World War II. Drawing on the theory of affordances, the author identifies how different materials were used by the German and Soviet armies to organize specific activities, and whether and how those activities led to order and/or disorder. The analysis suggests that soldiers used different materials to organize different activities within one and the same organizational context, which led to (dis)order. Whether order or disorder emerged was dependent on how human and material agencies were imbricated within the conduct of particular activities, and how they related to internal or external influencing factors. The findings contribute to increasing our understanding of how different types of imbrications of human and material agencies lead to (dis)order.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
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Publikationsdato | 2016 |
Antal sider | 31 |
Status | Udgivet - 2016 |
Begivenhed | 32nd EGOS Colloquium, Neaples 2016 - Varighed: 7 jul. 2016 → 9 jul. 2016 |
Konference
Konference | 32nd EGOS Colloquium, Neaples 2016 |
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Periode | 07/07/2016 → 09/07/2016 |