Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (1652) (remove)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1029)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (337)
- Doctoral Thesis (119)
- Review (100)
- Part of a Book (45)
- Other (16)
- Preprint (5)
- Journal/Publication series (1)
Keywords
- Germany (7)
- international organizations (7)
- globalization (6)
- European Union (5)
- Political Science (4)
- Politikwissenschaft (4)
- accountability (4)
- bicameralism (4)
- capitalism (4)
- climate policy (4)
Institute
- Sozialwissenschaften (1652) (remove)
Gender-Mainstreaming : Herausforderung für eine eingreifende Genderforschung und Frauenpolitik
(2002)
Fundraising interdisziplinär : ein Beitrag zur Erneuerung der Kultur gemeinwohlbezogenen Gebens
(2011)
Moving Forces
(2017)
Throughout a large part of the twentieth century, the body was interpreted as a field of signs, the meaning of which pointed to an unconscious dimension. At the height of the popularity of structuralism, Jacques Lacan deemed the unconscious to be “structured like a language.” Starting in the early 1990s, however, a deep shift occurred in the way the body was interpreted. A new movement cast tremendous doubt on the hegemony of language and instead advocated a performative, pictorial, and affective approach — the so-called material turn — which encompassed all of these. In the words of Karen Barad, this turn inquired as to why meaning, history, and truth are assigned to language only, whereas the movements of materiality are given less prominence: “How did language come to be more trustworthy than matter? Why are language and culture granted their own agency and historicity while matter is figured as passive and immutable?” With this shift toward the material, bodies began to be seen in a different light and their materiality understood as something that follows its own laws and movements, which cannot be understood exclusively in terms of social-cultural codes. Instead, these laws and movements call into question the very dichotomies of nature/culture and body/spirit.
Intensive bondage
(2018)
Ecology of Affect
(2017)
The way we conceive the human today is particularly affected by the shifts in media technology during the 20th century. Affect emerges as the new liminal concept that renders the body compatible in novel ways with the technology and politics of media. By ways of a relational reorganization the organic end technological life is condensed in a new, intense way to an ecology of affects.
In a recent article in this journal, Ahrne, Brunsson, and Seidl (2016) suggest a definition of organization as a ‘decided social order’ composed of five elements (membership, rules, hierarchies, monitoring, and sanctions) which rest on decisions. ‘Partial organization’ uses only one or a few of these decidable elements while ‘complete organization’ uses them all. Such decided orders may also occur outside formal organizations, as the authors observe. Although we appreciate the idea of improving our understanding of organization(s) in modern society, we believe that Ahrne, Brunsson, and Seidl's suggestion jeopardizes the concept of organization by blurring its specific meaning. As the authors already draw on the work of Niklas Luhmann, we propose taking this exploration a step further and the potential of systems theory more seriously. Organizational analysis would then be able to retain a distinctive notion of formal organization on the one hand while benefiting from an encompassing theory of modern society on the other. With this extended conceptual framework, we would expect to gain a deeper understanding of how organizations implement and shape different societal realms as well as mediate between their particular logics, and, not least, how they are related to non-organizational social forms (e.g. families).
Kompetenzentwicklung im universitären Studienfach Personal für das Berufsfeld Personalmanagement
(2003)
Georg Büchner: Woyzeck
(2016)