Materiality and Organizing
Social Interaction in a Technological World
Herausgeber: Leonardi, Paul M; Kallinikos, Jannis; Nardi, Bonnie A
Materiality and Organizing
Social Interaction in a Technological World
Herausgeber: Leonardi, Paul M; Kallinikos, Jannis; Nardi, Bonnie A
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This edited collection brings together leading academics in the field to explore the ways in which digital and non-digital artifacts shape how groups and collectives organize. It focuses on the idea of materiality and the interactions between the social and the technical in organizations, at work, and in technologies
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This edited collection brings together leading academics in the field to explore the ways in which digital and non-digital artifacts shape how groups and collectives organize. It focuses on the idea of materiality and the interactions between the social and the technical in organizations, at work, and in technologies
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Januar 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 165mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 703g
- ISBN-13: 9780199664054
- ISBN-10: 0199664056
- Artikelnr.: 36076088
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Januar 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 165mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 703g
- ISBN-13: 9780199664054
- ISBN-10: 0199664056
- Artikelnr.: 36076088
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Paul M. Leonardi is the Pentair-Nugent Associate Professor in the Departments of Communication Studies and Industrial Engineering and Management Sciences at Northwestern University where he teaches courses on the management of innovation and organizational change in the School of Communication, the McCormick School of Engineering, and the Kellogg School of Management. His research focuses on how companies can design organizational structures and employ advanced information technologies to more effectively create and share knowledge. He is the author of Car Crashes Without Cars: Lessons about Simulation Technology and Organizational Change from Automotive Design (MIT Press, 2012). Bonnie Nardi is a Professor in the Department of Informatics at the Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences, the University of California, Irvine. An anthropologist, she has studied the uses of digital technologies in offices, schools, homes, libraries, hospitals, scientific laboratories, and virtual worlds. Her theoretical orientation is activity theory. She is the author of many scientific articles and books. Her latest books are My Life as a Night Elf Priest: An Anthropological Account of World of Warcraft (University of Michigan Press, 2010) and Ethnography and Virtual Worlds: A Handbook of Method (co-author, Princeton University Press, 2012). Jannis Kallinikos is Professor and PhD programme Director in the Information Systems and Innovation Group, Department of Management at the London School of Economics. His research covers a wide range of topics on the interpenetration of technology with the administrative and institutional arrangements of contemporary societies. Recent books include The Consequences of Information: Institutional Implications of Technological Change (Edward Elgar, 2006), and Governing Through Technology: Information Artefacts and Social Practice (Palgrave, 2011).
* I. Setting the Stage
* 1: Jannis Kallinikos, Paul M. Leonardi, and Bonnie A. Nardi: The
Challenge of Materiality: Origins, Scope, and Prospects
* II. Theorizing Materiality
* 2: Paul M. Leonardi: Materiality, Sociomateriality, and
Socio-Technical Systems: What Do These Terms Mean? How Are They
Different? Do We Need Them?
* 3: Philip Faulkner and Jochen Runde: On Sociomateriality
* 4: Jannis Kallinikos: Form, Function, and Matter: Crossing the Border
of Materiality
* III. Materiality as Performativity
* 5: Neil Pollock: Ranking Devices: The Socio-Materiality of Ratings
* 6: Susan V. Scott and Wanda J. Orlikowski: Great Expectations: The
Materiality of Commensurability in Social Media
* 7: Youngjin Yoo: Digital Materiality and the Emergence of an
Evolutionary Science of the Artificial
* IV. Materiality as Assemblage
* 8: Hamid Ekbia and Bonnie A. Nardi: Inverse Instrumentality: How
Technologies Objectify Patients and Players
* 9: Anne-Laure Fayard: Space Matters, but How? Physical Space, Virtual
Space, and Place
* 10: Jennifer Whyte and Chris Harty: Socio-material Practices of
Design Co-ordination Across a Large Construction Project
* V. Materiality as Affordance
* 11: Daniel Robey, Benoit Raymond, and Chad Anderson: Theorizing
Information Technology as a Material Artifact in Information Systems
Research
* 12: Samer Faraj and Bijan Azad: The Materiality of Technology: An
Affordance Perspective
* 13: Carole Groleau and Christiane Demers: Pencils, Legos, and Guns: A
Study of Artifacts Used in Architecture
* VI. Materiality as Consequence
* 14: Brian T. Pentland and Harminder Singh: Materiality: What are the
Consequences?
* 15: François Cooren, Gail Fairhurst, and Romain Huët: Why Matter
Always Matters in (Organizational) Communication
* 16: Jenna Burrell: The Materiality of Rumor
* VII. Epilogue
* 17: Albert Borgmann: Matter Matters: Materiality in Philosophy,
Physics, and Technology
* 1: Jannis Kallinikos, Paul M. Leonardi, and Bonnie A. Nardi: The
Challenge of Materiality: Origins, Scope, and Prospects
* II. Theorizing Materiality
* 2: Paul M. Leonardi: Materiality, Sociomateriality, and
Socio-Technical Systems: What Do These Terms Mean? How Are They
Different? Do We Need Them?
* 3: Philip Faulkner and Jochen Runde: On Sociomateriality
* 4: Jannis Kallinikos: Form, Function, and Matter: Crossing the Border
of Materiality
* III. Materiality as Performativity
* 5: Neil Pollock: Ranking Devices: The Socio-Materiality of Ratings
* 6: Susan V. Scott and Wanda J. Orlikowski: Great Expectations: The
Materiality of Commensurability in Social Media
* 7: Youngjin Yoo: Digital Materiality and the Emergence of an
Evolutionary Science of the Artificial
* IV. Materiality as Assemblage
* 8: Hamid Ekbia and Bonnie A. Nardi: Inverse Instrumentality: How
Technologies Objectify Patients and Players
* 9: Anne-Laure Fayard: Space Matters, but How? Physical Space, Virtual
Space, and Place
* 10: Jennifer Whyte and Chris Harty: Socio-material Practices of
Design Co-ordination Across a Large Construction Project
* V. Materiality as Affordance
* 11: Daniel Robey, Benoit Raymond, and Chad Anderson: Theorizing
Information Technology as a Material Artifact in Information Systems
Research
* 12: Samer Faraj and Bijan Azad: The Materiality of Technology: An
Affordance Perspective
* 13: Carole Groleau and Christiane Demers: Pencils, Legos, and Guns: A
Study of Artifacts Used in Architecture
* VI. Materiality as Consequence
* 14: Brian T. Pentland and Harminder Singh: Materiality: What are the
Consequences?
* 15: François Cooren, Gail Fairhurst, and Romain Huët: Why Matter
Always Matters in (Organizational) Communication
* 16: Jenna Burrell: The Materiality of Rumor
* VII. Epilogue
* 17: Albert Borgmann: Matter Matters: Materiality in Philosophy,
Physics, and Technology
* I. Setting the Stage
* 1: Jannis Kallinikos, Paul M. Leonardi, and Bonnie A. Nardi: The
Challenge of Materiality: Origins, Scope, and Prospects
* II. Theorizing Materiality
* 2: Paul M. Leonardi: Materiality, Sociomateriality, and
Socio-Technical Systems: What Do These Terms Mean? How Are They
Different? Do We Need Them?
* 3: Philip Faulkner and Jochen Runde: On Sociomateriality
* 4: Jannis Kallinikos: Form, Function, and Matter: Crossing the Border
of Materiality
* III. Materiality as Performativity
* 5: Neil Pollock: Ranking Devices: The Socio-Materiality of Ratings
* 6: Susan V. Scott and Wanda J. Orlikowski: Great Expectations: The
Materiality of Commensurability in Social Media
* 7: Youngjin Yoo: Digital Materiality and the Emergence of an
Evolutionary Science of the Artificial
* IV. Materiality as Assemblage
* 8: Hamid Ekbia and Bonnie A. Nardi: Inverse Instrumentality: How
Technologies Objectify Patients and Players
* 9: Anne-Laure Fayard: Space Matters, but How? Physical Space, Virtual
Space, and Place
* 10: Jennifer Whyte and Chris Harty: Socio-material Practices of
Design Co-ordination Across a Large Construction Project
* V. Materiality as Affordance
* 11: Daniel Robey, Benoit Raymond, and Chad Anderson: Theorizing
Information Technology as a Material Artifact in Information Systems
Research
* 12: Samer Faraj and Bijan Azad: The Materiality of Technology: An
Affordance Perspective
* 13: Carole Groleau and Christiane Demers: Pencils, Legos, and Guns: A
Study of Artifacts Used in Architecture
* VI. Materiality as Consequence
* 14: Brian T. Pentland and Harminder Singh: Materiality: What are the
Consequences?
* 15: François Cooren, Gail Fairhurst, and Romain Huët: Why Matter
Always Matters in (Organizational) Communication
* 16: Jenna Burrell: The Materiality of Rumor
* VII. Epilogue
* 17: Albert Borgmann: Matter Matters: Materiality in Philosophy,
Physics, and Technology
* 1: Jannis Kallinikos, Paul M. Leonardi, and Bonnie A. Nardi: The
Challenge of Materiality: Origins, Scope, and Prospects
* II. Theorizing Materiality
* 2: Paul M. Leonardi: Materiality, Sociomateriality, and
Socio-Technical Systems: What Do These Terms Mean? How Are They
Different? Do We Need Them?
* 3: Philip Faulkner and Jochen Runde: On Sociomateriality
* 4: Jannis Kallinikos: Form, Function, and Matter: Crossing the Border
of Materiality
* III. Materiality as Performativity
* 5: Neil Pollock: Ranking Devices: The Socio-Materiality of Ratings
* 6: Susan V. Scott and Wanda J. Orlikowski: Great Expectations: The
Materiality of Commensurability in Social Media
* 7: Youngjin Yoo: Digital Materiality and the Emergence of an
Evolutionary Science of the Artificial
* IV. Materiality as Assemblage
* 8: Hamid Ekbia and Bonnie A. Nardi: Inverse Instrumentality: How
Technologies Objectify Patients and Players
* 9: Anne-Laure Fayard: Space Matters, but How? Physical Space, Virtual
Space, and Place
* 10: Jennifer Whyte and Chris Harty: Socio-material Practices of
Design Co-ordination Across a Large Construction Project
* V. Materiality as Affordance
* 11: Daniel Robey, Benoit Raymond, and Chad Anderson: Theorizing
Information Technology as a Material Artifact in Information Systems
Research
* 12: Samer Faraj and Bijan Azad: The Materiality of Technology: An
Affordance Perspective
* 13: Carole Groleau and Christiane Demers: Pencils, Legos, and Guns: A
Study of Artifacts Used in Architecture
* VI. Materiality as Consequence
* 14: Brian T. Pentland and Harminder Singh: Materiality: What are the
Consequences?
* 15: François Cooren, Gail Fairhurst, and Romain Huët: Why Matter
Always Matters in (Organizational) Communication
* 16: Jenna Burrell: The Materiality of Rumor
* VII. Epilogue
* 17: Albert Borgmann: Matter Matters: Materiality in Philosophy,
Physics, and Technology