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How Language And Culture Distort The Management Concept: An Attempt To Compare French And American Management Representations

Author

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  • Bertrand AGOSTINI

Abstract

Language and culture are inseparable. They feed and influence each other. Therefore depending on its historical evolution, a given word can be filled with several different meanings. Furthermore, being a way to communicate our perception, language is submitted to the 4 functions of consciousness: senses, thought, intuition, feeling. Therefore the fundamental relationship between language and culture is both rational and irrational. The aim of this article is to show through a series of examples that in a management context, beyond the use of a particular terminology, there is a variable preconception of the objects described by words that affect the perception of a given managerial cultural reality or representation. Therefore the words “management”, “organization”, “hierarchy” offer a wide variety of meanings and representations that vary from one culture to another. As Gérard Tiry (1994) puts it, the preconceptions that are in ourselves constantly put us in a comparative state of mind that distorts the situation by imposing a frame, a starting point, a direction and an evaluation.

Suggested Citation

  • Bertrand AGOSTINI, 2012. "How Language And Culture Distort The Management Concept: An Attempt To Compare French And American Management Representations," Cahiers du CEREFIGE 1206, CEREFIGE (Centre Europeen de Recherche en Economie Financiere et Gestion des Entreprises), Universite de Lorraine, revised 2012.
  • Handle: RePEc:fie:wpaper:1206
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