Papers by Emilie Reinhold
Following the art-body-ethics turn in management studies we use dance as an analogy in order to e... more Following the art-body-ethics turn in management studies we use dance as an analogy in order to explore how
the body can resist organisational control in office work contexts. We argue that in office work gestures can be a
site of post-recognition resistance. Drawing on two art videos and on dance studies, we explain that this is
operated either through arrest or through flow. In fact aesthetic experiments in gesturing disrupt the work
rhythm needed for organisational efficiency and enforced by organisational control. This allows us to contribute
primarily to the literature on resistance in organisation studies and relatedly to the growing literature on dance
in organisation studies through demonstrating how dance can be a source of resistance.
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Papers by Emilie Reinhold
the body can resist organisational control in office work contexts. We argue that in office work gestures can be a
site of post-recognition resistance. Drawing on two art videos and on dance studies, we explain that this is
operated either through arrest or through flow. In fact aesthetic experiments in gesturing disrupt the work
rhythm needed for organisational efficiency and enforced by organisational control. This allows us to contribute
primarily to the literature on resistance in organisation studies and relatedly to the growing literature on dance
in organisation studies through demonstrating how dance can be a source of resistance.
the body can resist organisational control in office work contexts. We argue that in office work gestures can be a
site of post-recognition resistance. Drawing on two art videos and on dance studies, we explain that this is
operated either through arrest or through flow. In fact aesthetic experiments in gesturing disrupt the work
rhythm needed for organisational efficiency and enforced by organisational control. This allows us to contribute
primarily to the literature on resistance in organisation studies and relatedly to the growing literature on dance
in organisation studies through demonstrating how dance can be a source of resistance.