Remember re-engineering? The rhetorical appeal of a managerial salvation device
Case, Peter (1999) Remember re-engineering? The rhetorical appeal of a managerial salvation device. Journal of Management Studies, 36 (4). pp. 419-441.
PDF (Published Version)
- Published Version
Restricted to Repository staff only |
Abstract
This paper subjects a contemporary managerial doctrine, business process re-engineering (BPR), to rhetorical scrutiny. Finding analytical inspiration from the writings of the American literary critic Kenneth Burke and adopting an anthropological attitude towards 'history', it seeks to demystify the appeal of BPR rhetoric as represented in various published and unpublished texts. The analysis makes extensive use of 'sacred' motifs in order to gain 'perspective through incongruity' and expose the secular motives at work in BPR literature. An analogy is drawn between ethnographic examples of 'amnesia' drawn from the author's study of a computer installation and 'amnesia writ large' through BPR. On the basis of this comparison, it is suggested that BPR can be read as offering cathartic absolution of the collective guilt associated with information technology mismanagement. Any 'doubts' that a managerial public may be harbouring are rhetorically harnessed by BPR protagonists in their attempts to acquire secular converts. The popularity of BPR may now be on the decline but there will be other similarly instrumental agendas to replace it in the future to which students of management need to be alert.
Item ID: | 26834 |
---|---|
Item Type: | Article (Research - C1) |
ISSN: | 1467-6486 |
Date Deposited: | 10 Jul 2013 02:42 |
FoR Codes: | 15 COMMERCE, MANAGEMENT, TOURISM AND SERVICES > 1503 Business and Management > 150310 Organisation and Management Theory @ 100% |
SEO Codes: | 95 CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING > 9504 Religion and Ethics > 950402 Business Ethics @ 100% |
Downloads: |
Total: 1 |
More Statistics |