1st Edition

Affect in Organization and Management

Edited By Carolyn Hunter, Nina Kivinen Copyright 2023
122 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

122 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

122 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Affect in Organization and Management asks how affect theory understands everyday working lives through embodied, social and political practice. Discussing a range of dimensions and perspectives on affect, the book considers how subjects are formed through their connections with others, both human and non- or more-than-human. The six women writers on affect presented in this series (Sara... Read more
1.  Introduction: Affect in Organization and Management
Carolyn Hunter and Nina Kivinen
2. Sara Ahmed: A Return to Emotions
Bontu Lucie Guschke, Jannick Friis Christensen and Thomas Burø
3. In the Worlding of Kathleen Stewart: Daydreaming a Conversation with ‘SHE’
Silvia Gherardi
4. In the Web of the Spider-Woman: Towards a New Cosmopolitics of Familiarity and Kinship in Organization (Donna Haraway)
Lindsay Hamilton
5. Jane Bennett: Marvelling at a World of Vibrant Matter
Justine Grønbæk Pors
6. Becoming with Barad: A Material-Discursive-Affective Conversation
Noortje van Amsterdam, Katrine Meldgaard Kjær and Dide van Eck
7. Corporeal Ethics in the More-Than-Human World (Rosalyn Diprose)
Veera Kinnunen

Biography

Carolyn Hunter is Senior Lecturer at the York Management School, University of York, UK.

Nina Kivinen is Associate Professor at the Department of Civil and Industrial Engineering, Uppsala University, Sweden.

"This book on affect and embodiment in organizations offers a much needed alternative to the reductionist mainstream discourse on management and organizing! Some key ideas in this area coined by women authors from Donna Haraway to Kathleen Stewart are presented and discussed from the perspective of organization theory and practice. Fascinating and timely read!"
Monika Kostera, Jagiellonian University, Poland

"This book brings together a fine collection of commentaries on some of the most important women writers on affect, and it does so in a way which shows why and how affect matters in work and organization."
Torkild Thanem, Stockholm University