2014/2015 KAN-CSOCV1008U Difference and Disruption: The politics of organization
English Title | |
Difference and Disruption: The politics of organization |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Course period | First Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc of Social Science
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Course coordinator | |
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Adm. contact: Karina Ravn Nielsen, electives.mpp@cbs.dk or phone 3815 3782 | |
Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 08-04-2014 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Active class participation (text- and presentation-based discussions) is strongly recommended. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||
In the 1990s, fuelled by the political event of
the fall of the wall and the collapse of socialist regimes, some
commentators proclaimed ‘the end of politics’. On a global level,
establishing liberal democracies in conjunction with market-based
economies would herald an age of peaceful co-existence, putting to
rest the ‘cold’ and violent struggle between political systems and
Weltanschauungen.
Some 20 years later, this fantasy of “the peaceful realization of reason by a government of the wise against the backdrop of consensual, consumerist mediocracy”, as the French philosopher Jacques Rancière (1995, p. 34f.) rather misgivingly called it, has turned out to be – well, a fantasy. From a proliferation of armed conflicts to guerilla-style terrorist movements, from global uprisings in the mold of “Occupy” to the “Anonymous” hacker movement, from Arab Spring to Spanish Indignados to “Femen” to countless small-scale struggles around how to organize one’s life in contemporary cities: Politics is back (and probably never went away, anyway). But perhaps it is not about ‘politics’ but about ‘the political’, not about institutional politics and its individual or organizational actors but about the ability to make a new beginning and interrupt and reshape a given order, to echo Hanna Arendt’s famous definition of the political (2003). Politics in the sense of the political, then, emerges through the struggle of an unrecognized party for equal recognition in the established order, of making one’s voice heard, of changing the terms of a given debate, of interrupting and reinventing a given organization of what can be said and done. The focus on the political, and thus on its disruptive moment and how plurality and difference, transformation and new publics come to appear, is currently – and with regard to current events: not surprisingly – en vogue again, occupying some of the more provocative contemporary thinkers. It is also the focus of this course, and informs how we wish to approach, study and reflect on the politics of organization. Because what is also at stake in these discussions is how we approach the politics of organization and new forms and processes of organizing. Again, consider “Occupy” or “Anonymous”: Arguably, these movements become political by changing the ways they organize themselves and seek to influence their environments. They present us with the task of not only rethinking politics as the political, but also rethinking the role and processes of organization that take place in political events. In this course, then, we seek to confront the study of organization with the question of the political. To do so, we will read the most important texts of the current ‘political turn’, which is connected to political and philosophical thinkers such as Agamben, Laclau, Mouffe, Rancière and Žižek. What can we learn about and ‘for’ organization? Moreover, do these texts, concepts and ways of thinking help us to make sense of processes of organizing as they appear in contemporary political, social and urban movements, maybe even in seemingly conventional organizational contexts? Might we even say that current processes of (dis-)organizing call for a different understanding of the political and thus the politics of organization? To explore a new politics of organization, the students are thus asked to relate their conceptual findings to the study of actual movements and processes of (re)organizing such as the ones mentioned above. Course structure (indicative)The course is text-based: It hinges on engaging with concepts and debates on the political in order to coax out their importance for understanding and enacting organizational processes. To make things concrete, students are then asked to explore contemporary performances of organization and analyze and reflect on their politics, i.e. mainly with regard to the course literature.The success of all sessions is predicated on the students’ (and, of course, the teachers’) engagement. Discussion-based formats and peer-learning are emphasized.
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Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The course will consist of input lectures as well as text-, video- and research-based dialogical sessions. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Further Information | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Changes in course schedule may occur
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Agamben, G. (2000) Means without End. Notes
on Politics. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Arendt, H. (1970). On Violence. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Javanovich. Beyes, T. and Volkmann, C. (2010), ‘The fantasy of the organizational One: Postdemocracy, organizational transformation and the (im)possibility of politics’, Journal of Organizational Change Management, 23 (6): 651-668. Beyes, T., Michels C. and Steyaert C. (2013), ‘In Search of the Political’, unpublished manuscript. Butler, J. Laclau, E. and Žižek, S. (2000). Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary Dialogues On The Left. London and New York: Verso. Böhm, S. (2005). Repositioning Organization Theory: Impossibilities and Strategies. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Marchart, O. (2007). Post-foundational Political Thought:Political Difference in Nancy, Lefort, Badiou and Laclau (Taking on the Political).Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Rancière, J. (1995). On the Shores of Politics. London: Verso. Rancière, J. (2010). ‘Ten Theses on Politics’. In: Dissensus: On Politics and Aesthetics (pp. 27-44). London: continuum. |
Last updated on
08-04-2014