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Concepts of Culture and Organizational Analysis
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Citations
39
References
1983
Year
International ManagementCultureOrganization AnalysisOrganizational CommunicationBusiness CultureCross-cultural ManagementManagementOrganization TheoryBusinessComparative ManagementOrganizational CultureStrategic ManagementOrganizational AnalysisOrganizational BehaviorManagement Meetings
The paper extends earlier conference presentations and acknowledges key contributors, positioning culture theory within five contemporary research themes in organizational studies. It investigates the significance of culture for organizational analysis, assessing its power and limitations within the prevailing theoretical assumptions. The review shows that the concept of culture opens multiple promising directions for organizational analysis.
Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the International Communication Association/Speech Communication Association Conference on Interpretive Approaches to Organizational Communication, Alta, Utah, July 1981, and the Eastern Academy of Management meetings, Baltimore, Maryland, May 1982. I would like to express special appreciation to Mike Pacanowsky and Linda Putnam for organizing the Interpretive Conference, which provided the impetus as well as encouragement for the development of these ideas. Thanks also to Gareth Morgan, Linda Pike, Lou Pondy, and Karl Weick for their various forms of inspiration. This paper examines the significance of the concept of culture for organizational analysis. The intersection of culturetheory and organization theory is evident in five current research themes: comparative management, corporate culture, organizational cognition, organizational symbolism, and unconscious processes and organization. Researchers pursue these themes for different purposes and their work is based on different assumptions about the nature of culture and organization. The task of evaluating the power and limitations of the concept of culture must be conducted within this assumptive context. This review demonstrates that the concept of culture takes organization analysis in several different and promising directions.
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