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Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem. / Costea, Bogdan; Introna, Lucas.
Organisation and Identity. London, New York: Routledge, 2005. p. 60-86.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Costea, B & Introna, L 2005, Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem. in Organisation and Identity. Routledge, London, New York, pp. 60-86.

APA

Costea, B., & Introna, L. (2005). Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem. In Organisation and Identity (pp. 60-86). Routledge.

Vancouver

Costea B, Introna L. Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem. In Organisation and Identity. London, New York: Routledge. 2005. p. 60-86

Author

Costea, Bogdan ; Introna, Lucas. / Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem. Organisation and Identity. London, New York : Routledge, 2005. pp. 60-86

Bibtex

@inbook{61c825c0ec534432ba21680e163d102d,
title = "Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem.",
abstract = "Diversity management is an established theme in managerial ideology. This paper offers a cultural-historical analysis of the emergence and nature of diversity management ideas and practices. These elements are combined with aspects of philosophical critique derived from an existential phenomenological perspective. We argue that diversity management is an attempt to capture the elementary experience of self and other in the sphere of managerial control and to subvert the equal opportunities agenda. We find that the rhetorical moves of diversity management merely recycle old ideas and techniques from other currents (such as organisational culture management, strategic HRM, participation, empowerment, communication, teamwork). Diversity management transforms the elementary lived experience of self and other in the world into a source of organisational {\^a}��problems{\^a}��, of {\^a}��pathology{\^a}��, and thus breaches the basic space of personal ethical engagement. Using elements of Heidegger{\^a}��s and Levinas{\^a}�� philosophical anthropologies, we argue that this elementary level of our being in the world, the encounter with {\^a}��others{\^a}��, is irreducibly mysterious, but not problematic, or pathologic, or a source of dis-organisation; rather, it is intensely personal and thus beyond any possibility of formal rationalisation and generalisation. In other words, human difference is not manageable in the sense in which managerial ideology conceptualises it in diversity management.",
keywords = "diversity management, self, other, mystery, Heidegger, Levinas",
author = "Bogdan Costea and Lucas Introna",
year = "2005",
language = "English",
isbn = "0-415-32231-6",
pages = "60--86",
booktitle = "Organisation and Identity",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Self and Other in Everyday Existence: A Mystery Not A Problem.

AU - Costea, Bogdan

AU - Introna, Lucas

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - Diversity management is an established theme in managerial ideology. This paper offers a cultural-historical analysis of the emergence and nature of diversity management ideas and practices. These elements are combined with aspects of philosophical critique derived from an existential phenomenological perspective. We argue that diversity management is an attempt to capture the elementary experience of self and other in the sphere of managerial control and to subvert the equal opportunities agenda. We find that the rhetorical moves of diversity management merely recycle old ideas and techniques from other currents (such as organisational culture management, strategic HRM, participation, empowerment, communication, teamwork). Diversity management transforms the elementary lived experience of self and other in the world into a source of organisational �problems�, of �pathology�, and thus breaches the basic space of personal ethical engagement. Using elements of Heidegger�s and Levinas� philosophical anthropologies, we argue that this elementary level of our being in the world, the encounter with �others�, is irreducibly mysterious, but not problematic, or pathologic, or a source of dis-organisation; rather, it is intensely personal and thus beyond any possibility of formal rationalisation and generalisation. In other words, human difference is not manageable in the sense in which managerial ideology conceptualises it in diversity management.

AB - Diversity management is an established theme in managerial ideology. This paper offers a cultural-historical analysis of the emergence and nature of diversity management ideas and practices. These elements are combined with aspects of philosophical critique derived from an existential phenomenological perspective. We argue that diversity management is an attempt to capture the elementary experience of self and other in the sphere of managerial control and to subvert the equal opportunities agenda. We find that the rhetorical moves of diversity management merely recycle old ideas and techniques from other currents (such as organisational culture management, strategic HRM, participation, empowerment, communication, teamwork). Diversity management transforms the elementary lived experience of self and other in the world into a source of organisational �problems�, of �pathology�, and thus breaches the basic space of personal ethical engagement. Using elements of Heidegger�s and Levinas� philosophical anthropologies, we argue that this elementary level of our being in the world, the encounter with �others�, is irreducibly mysterious, but not problematic, or pathologic, or a source of dis-organisation; rather, it is intensely personal and thus beyond any possibility of formal rationalisation and generalisation. In other words, human difference is not manageable in the sense in which managerial ideology conceptualises it in diversity management.

KW - diversity management

KW - self

KW - other

KW - mystery

KW - Heidegger

KW - Levinas

M3 - Chapter

SN - 0-415-32231-6

SP - 60

EP - 86

BT - Organisation and Identity

PB - Routledge

CY - London, New York

ER -