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Interregnum and Critical Management Studies: The possible end of meaningful work

Tommy Jensen

Scandinavian Journal of Management, 2018, vol. 34, issue 4, 343-348

Abstract: We are now witnessing the first generation born into liquid modernity – the millennials – for whom being primarily called on by society as consumers and experiencing the deepened significance and logic of life as a lottery (Bauman and Mauro, 2016) is natural (yet uncomfortable). The main point made is that the first ‘solid’ (sic!) generation of liquid consumers that Bauman wrote so vividly about is set to embark on adult life and enter organizations en masse as managers and workers. It is argued that the entry of the millennials further intensifies the ongoing subsidiarization process that is already taking place in organizations and means that the individualization of collective organizational problems will be even more concealed and difficult to detect. In relation to the millennials entering organizations, it is further argued that it is essential that Critical Management Studies (CMS) takes heed of the challenges that the entry of the millennials carry with them. A Baumanian framework informs us that this can only be done by avoiding nostalgia – going back-to-the-future.

Keywords: Aesthetics; CMS; Interregnum; Millennials; Nostalgia (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1016/j.scaman.2018.03.004

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