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From narrative dreams to instrumentation of nightmare: Utopian Convergences or intentional run away?

Author

Listed:
  • Miguel Delattre

    (ISEOR - Institut de Socio-économie des Entreprises et des ORganisations - Institut de socio-économie des entreprises et des organisations)

  • Rodolph Ocler

Abstract

The concept of organization, as support for collective action, is polysemic, paradoxical, inevitable sometimes lead. It catalyzes the conflicting perceptions of living together (hell as defined by Sartre) and we asked in return, not only on how the "little arrangements" needed to coexist or to build collective cohesion but also on how we are integrated into reality and how we represent the world. The balance achieved between an experience and representation that we can have is sometimes a source of discord. This paper considers organization as a social unit submerged by societal constraints that it cannot escape. The unit pursues a social purpose, negotiated with both its external environment, particularly in the fight for resources necessary for its survival, but also with its internal environment through ongoing negotiation of quality its members: their contribution. Our developments, devoted to an analysis of the place of human organization, aims at putting into light this quest that is the paradox, since a sense of convergence emerges discourses mobilized to orchestrate some kind of leak forward, due to instrumented shifts in assembling the arguments to reduce the final essence of the subject.

Suggested Citation

  • Miguel Delattre & Rodolph Ocler, 2010. "From narrative dreams to instrumentation of nightmare: Utopian Convergences or intentional run away?," Post-Print halshs-00756818, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:halshs-00756818
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    Keywords

    Dreams; Nightmares and Freedom;

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