The emergence of institutions: an aesthetic-affective perspective

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Abstract

This book presents an experiential, aesthetic-affective approach to the study of institutions. Drawing on institutional sociology, hermeneutics, phenomenology and process philosophy, it conceptualises institutions as collective experiences with their own self-promoting and self-propelling powers. Instead of seeing institutional emergence, change and decline as the result of actors’ interests and manipulations, this book re-establishes the importance of factors beyond human design and intervention. Drawing on process theory, it shows how ideas, norms and values can form self-stabilising configurations that affect people without conscious realisation. It complements current thinking about institutions by showing how institutions constitute people long before people constitute them. With the help of authors as diverse as Antonio Damasio, A.N. Whitehead, J.W. von Goethe and Max Weber, Elke Weik crafts a perspective that allows us to understand institutions as aesthetic and affective powers in their own right. This book is for researchers interested in process theory, institutional and organisational studies, hermeneutics, and aesthetics.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherSpringer
Number of pages166
ISBN (Print)9783030898946
ISBN (Electronic)9783030898953
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2022

Keywords

  • Institutional Theory
  • Emergence
  • phenomenological approaches
  • Process Theory
  • Culture (sociology)
  • Templar Order
  • Human Agency
  • Emergence of Institutions
  • Aesthetic-Affective Perspective
  • Anti-cognitivist
  • Templar order
  • Process theory
  • Hermeneutics
  • Insights from Neurobiology

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