Future and organization studies: On the rediscovery of a problematic temporal category in organizations
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In: Organization Studies, Vol. 41, No. 10, 01.10.2020, p. 1441-1455.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Future and organization studies
T2 - On the rediscovery of a problematic temporal category in organizations
AU - Wenzel, Matthias
AU - Krämer, Hannes
AU - Koch, Jochen
AU - Reckwitz, Andreas
N1 - The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Viadrina Center B/ORDERS IN MOTION based on funds from the Ministry for Science, Research, and Culture of the State of Brandenburg. Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2020.
PY - 2020/10/1
Y1 - 2020/10/1
N2 - Even though organizational activities have always been future-oriented, actors’ fascination with the future is not a universal phenomenon of organizational life. Human experience of the future is a rather young product of modernity, in which actors discovered the indeterminacy of the future, as well as their abilities to ‘make’ and, in part, even control and de-problematize it through ever-more sophisticated planning practices. In this essay, we argue that actors have recently ‘rediscovered’ the future as a problematic, open-ended category in organizational life, one that they cannot delineate through planning practices alone. This, we suggest, has been produced through a pluralization of what we refer to as ‘future-making practices’, a set of practices through which actors produce and enact the future. Based on illustrations of the experienced problematic open-endedness of the future in prevalent discourses such as climate change, digital transformation and post-truth politics, we invite scholars to explore future-making practices as an important but under-appreciated organizational phenomenon.
AB - Even though organizational activities have always been future-oriented, actors’ fascination with the future is not a universal phenomenon of organizational life. Human experience of the future is a rather young product of modernity, in which actors discovered the indeterminacy of the future, as well as their abilities to ‘make’ and, in part, even control and de-problematize it through ever-more sophisticated planning practices. In this essay, we argue that actors have recently ‘rediscovered’ the future as a problematic, open-ended category in organizational life, one that they cannot delineate through planning practices alone. This, we suggest, has been produced through a pluralization of what we refer to as ‘future-making practices’, a set of practices through which actors produce and enact the future. Based on illustrations of the experienced problematic open-endedness of the future in prevalent discourses such as climate change, digital transformation and post-truth politics, we invite scholars to explore future-making practices as an important but under-appreciated organizational phenomenon.
KW - Management studies
KW - future
KW - future-making practices
KW - modernity
KW - planning
KW - Practice theory
KW - temporality
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083554759&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0170840620912977
DO - 10.1177/0170840620912977
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 41
SP - 1441
EP - 1455
JO - Organization Studies
JF - Organization Studies
SN - 0170-8406
IS - 10
ER -