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Critical hermeneutics: deriving meaning from historical sources

In: Handbook of Historical Methods for Management

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  • R. Daniel Wadhwani

Abstract

This paper introduces critical hermeneutic methods for interpreting historical sources in management and organizational research. Capitalizing on the “temporal distance” between past and present that history affords, hermeneutic interpretation allows researchers to critique their existing theoretical constructs and explanations of phenomena and produce new ones. Drawing on Ricoeur (1976, 1991), I identify three stages of hermeneutic interpretation, which involves contextualizing a historical text in a different way. First, preconception recognizes that our initial readings of a text will be shaped by the prejudgments we hold based on our theoretical and cultural perceptions in the present. Second, distanciation involves identifying themes in the text that contradict or complicate these preconceptions and tracing these themes out to related primary and secondary sources as a way to derive alternative meanings and a new narrative. Finally, appropriation involves drawing out implications for management and organization theory by generalizing key claims of the alternative narrative.

Suggested Citation

  • R. Daniel Wadhwani, 2023. "Critical hermeneutics: deriving meaning from historical sources," Chapters, in: Stephanie Decker & William M. Foster & Elena Giovannoni (ed.), Handbook of Historical Methods for Management, chapter 15, pages 218-231, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:20588_15
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    File URL: https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781800883741.00024
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