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Enterprise as a Carrier of Culture
An Anthropological Approach to Business Administration

Englisch · Fester Einband

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This book expands anthropological studies of business enterprise to include comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives. A number of books on business anthropology have been published, but most of them are written by anthropologists alone. By contrast, this book engages interdisciplinary studies, e.g., not only by anthropologists but also management scholars and other social scientists. It is the second volume of studies forwarding anthropological approaches to business administration, Keiei Jinruigaku.
This volume focusses on the cultural dimensions of enterprise. Here enterprise is viewed as a medium carrying culture, rather than solely an entity of production and management, as is typical in mainstream studies. The approach is based on Tadao Umesao's definition of culture as a projection of instruments/devices and institutions into the mental/spiritual dimensions of life. Therefore, in our view production and management are among the projections of the cultural aspects of enterprise. This perspective, we believe, constitutes a new frontier in the study of business administration.
This book consists of three parts, the first being "religiosity and spirituality", the second "exhibitions, performance and inducement," and the third "history and story." In Part I, Quaker Codes, ex-votos, and spiritual leadership are discussed in relation to management and behavior, and miracles and pilgrimage. Part II describes exhibitions justifying nuclear power industry within power plants in both Japan and England, the exhibition by English families of their porcelain collections, and the performance skills of orchestral maestros. All of these examples indicate that, through the use of narratives and myths, exhibits and performances overtly and covertly induce visitors or audiences to certain viewpoints and emotions. Part III offers examples of histories and stories of enterprise articulated through the branding and consumption of industrial products, and their display in enterprise museums where the essence of culture and heritage is cherished and emphasized, by and for the wider community and the enterprise itself.
Conjoined as an interdisciplinary team of Western and Japanese researchers, we apply an anthropological approach to the cultural history of enterprise in both Britain and Japan.
 

Über den Autor / die Autorin

Hirochika Nakamaki
 is a Professor Emeritus of the National Museum of Ethnology, Japan, and Director of Suita City Museum. He is the author of 
Japanese Religions at Home and Abroad: Anthropological Perspectives 
(2003), and editor of 
The Culture of Association and Associations in Contemporary Japanese Society, Senri Ethnological Studies
 no.62 (2002), co-editor of 
Business and Anthropology: A Focus on Sacred Space, Senri Ethnological Studies
 no.82 (2013), and co-editor of 
Enterprise as an Instrument of Civilization: A
n Anthropological Approach to Business Administration (2016).

Koichiro Hioki
 is a Professor Emeritus at Kyoto University and Professor of Management at Shujitsu University. He is the author of 
Ichiba no Gyakushū: Personal Communication no Fukken
 (Counter Attack of Bazaar: Re-empowerment of Personal Communication) (in Japanese) (2002), 
Shusse no Mechanism: Ziph Kōzō de Yomu Kyōsō Shakai
 (Mechanism of Career Advancement: Competitive Society Read by Zipf Structure) (in Japanese) (1998), and 
Bunmei no Sōchi to shite no Kigyō 
(Enterprise as an Instrument of Civilization) (in Japanese) (1994). He is also a co-editor of 
Enterprise as an Instrument of Civilization
 (2016).

Noriya Sumihara
 is a Professor at the Faculty of International Studies at Tenri University, Nara, where he mainly teaches international students about Japanese culture and society, as well as regional studies of Nara from an anthropological perspective. His early work includes long-term fieldwork in a Japanese multinational corporation in North America, while more recently he has been researching the relationship between management philosophy and business practices in Japan, India and Indonesia. He holds a PhD in Cultural Anthropology from New York University, and a BA in Literature from Kobe University.

Izumi Mitsui 
is a Professor of Business Administration in the College of Economics, Nihon University. Her research interests include management philosophy, history of management thought, and anthropological approaches to business administration. She is the author of 
Shakaiteki Networking-ron no Genryū: MP Follett no Shisō, 
[
An Origin of Social Networking Theory: The Thought of MP Follett
] (in Japanese) (2009), the editor of 
Asia-kigyō no Keieirinen: Seisei Denpa Keishō no Dynamism, 
[
Management Philosophy of Asian Companies: Dynamism of Creation, Diffusion and Succession
] (in Japanese) (2013), and a co-editor of 
Enterprise as an Instrument of Civilization
 (2016).


Zusammenfassung


This book expands anthropological studies of business enterprise to include comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives. A number of books on business anthropology have been published, but most of them are written by anthropologists alone. By contrast, this book engages interdisciplinary studies, e.g., not only by anthropologists but also management scholars and other social scientists. It is the second volume of studies forwarding anthropological approaches to business administration,
Keiei Jinruigaku.
This volume focusses on the cultural dimensions of enterprise. Here enterprise is viewed as a medium carrying culture, rather than solely an entity of production and management, as is typical in mainstream studies. The approach is based on Tadao Umesao’s definition of culture as a projection of instruments/devices and institutions into the mental/spiritual dimensions of life. Therefore, in our view production and management are among the projections of the cultural aspects of enterprise. This perspective, we believe, constitutes a new frontier in the study of business administration.

This book consists of three parts, the first being “religiosity and spirituality”, the second “exhibitions, performance and inducement,” and the third “history and story.” In Part I, Quaker Codes,
ex-votos
, and spiritual leadership are discussed in relation to management and behavior, and miracles and pilgrimage. Part II describes exhibitions justifying nuclear power industry within power plants in both Japan and England, the exhibition by English families of their porcelain collections, and the performance skills of orchestral maestros. All of these examples indicate that, through the use of narratives and myths, exhibits and performances overtly and covertly induce visitors or audiences to certain viewpoints and emotions. Part III offers examples of histories and stories of enterprise articulated through the branding and consumption of industrial products, and their display in enterprise museums where the essence of culture and heritage is cherished and emphasized, by and for the wider community and the enterprise itself.

Conjoined as an interdisciplinary team of Western and Japanese researchers, we apply an anthropological approach to the cultural history of enterprise in both Britain and Japan.  

 

Produktdetails

Mitarbeit Hirochika Nakamaki (Herausgeber), Koichiro Hioki (Herausgeber), Noriya Sumihara (Herausgeber), Izumi Mitsui (Herausgeber), Koichir Hioki (Herausgeber), Noriya Sumihara et al (Herausgeber)
Verlag Springer, Berlin
 
Inhalt Buch
Produktform Fester Einband
Erscheinungsdatum 31.08.2019
Thema Sozialwissenschaften, Recht,Wirtschaft > Wirtschaft > Management
 
EAN 9789811371929
ISBN 978-981-1371-92-9
Anzahl Seiten 191
Illustration XIII, 191 p. 26 illus., 15 illus. in color.
Abmessung (Verpackung) 15.7 x 24.1 x 1.7 cm
Gewicht (Verpackung) 458 g
 
Serie Translational Systems Sciences
Themen Management, B, Cultural Anthropology, Leadership, Human Resource Management, Business and Management, Business Strategy/Leadership, Anthropology, Ethnology, Business ethics & social responsibility, Social & cultural anthropology, Innovation/Technology Management, Business Ethics, Research & development management, Management science, Industrial Management, Sociocultural Anthropology, Diversity in the workplace, Diversity Management/Women in Business, Diversity, inclusivity in the workplace
 

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