Entrepreneurship as in(ter)vention: Reconsidering the conceptual politics of method in entrepreneurship studies
Chris Steyaert
Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, 2011, vol. 23, issue 1-2, 77-88
Abstract:
In this article, I look into Bengt Johannisson's experiments with enactive research in the so-called Anamorphosis Project. This methodological experiment was based on the assumption that to understand entrepreneurship, researchers themselves must enact an entrepreneurial process and reflect upon it by engaging in auto-ethnography. By connecting aesthetics and politics, this experiment guides us in seeing methodologies as more than just tools -- actually as in(ter)ventions or inventive forms of intervening vis-à-vis societal or community issues. By conceptualizing the performance of scholarship as involving practices of enacting and engaging, I suggest entrepreneurship scholars to take into account the ontological politics of method and to anticipate what can be called methodological experimentation. Drawing upon non-representational theory and actor-network theory, I flesh out the notion of in(ter)vention by emphasizing both its performative and participative dimension.
Date: 2011
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:entreg:v:23:y:2011:i:1-2:p:77-88
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DOI: 10.1080/08985626.2011.540416
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