
Under Development
In reviewing research into underlying dimensions of
the negotiation process, Gelfand & McCusker (2001) find heavy use of battle
and game metaphor (e.g., position, common ground, strategy) and theater/cinema
metaphor (e.g., dialog, storyline, frames, roles).
This would seem to reflect the operating metaphors
of both the (predominantly Western) scientists studying the negotiation process
as well as negotiators themselves. What
additional metaphors might be generated that would bring out other, neglected
aspects of the negotiation process?
Because it is found within cultural concepts of, for
example, battle, games, and theater, and because bodily movement elements are
so much more universal, Primary Conceptual Metaphor would seem an obvious
choice for researchers.
Researchers and practitioners of management science
also demonstrate some enthusiasm for metaphor.
Michael Lissack
presents the following:
Starbuck
& Milliken (1988) : “Perceptual
frameworks [metaphors] categorize data, assign likelihoods to data, hide data,
and fill in missing data.”
March (1984) argues that
"organizational life is as much about interpretation, intellect, metaphors
of theory, and fitting our history into an understanding, as it is about
decisions and coping with the environment." (Weick, 1995) Clegg (1994) goes on to state:
"Multiple ways of looking at organizations are required to achieve better
understandings of their complexities and contradictions. Any single metaphor is
partial."
Schön
(1983) in discussing problem setting notes, "we select what we will treat
as the 'things' of the situation, we set the boundaries of our attention to it,
and we impose upon it a coherence .... Problem setting is a process in which,
interactively, we name the things to which we will attend and frame the context
in which we will attend to them." This use of frames and metaphor is
integral to the process Weick (1995) defines as "sensemaking... to
construct, filter, frame, create facticity, and render the subject into something
more tangible."
Morgan
(1986) is well known for having identified a series of metaphors which can be
used to acquire understanding of organizations. These metaphors range from
viewing the organization as a machine to viewing it as an ameba. Weick (1993)
cites an architectural metaphor as inappropriate for organizational design
because it portrays "a bounded activity that occurs in a fixed point in
time" focusing on" structures rather than processes". He
proposes instead the metaphor of improvisation as in a theater. "Design,
viewed from the perspective of improvisation, is more emergent, more
continuous, more filled with surprise, more difficult to control, more tied to
the content of action, and more affected by what people pay attention to than are
designs implied by architecture."(emphasis added)
Ghosal and
Mintzberg (1994) "propose a new metaphor -- the spinning top. It suggests
that the energy of diversified corporations should be invested into sustaining
a dynamic balance." They go on to discuss relative distributions of effort
between the base, core, and bulk of the organization when viewed through the
filter of the spinning top. Why make use of this metaphor? "Our metaphor
allows us to address the following questions."
The famous
garbage can metaphor (Cohen, March & Oldsen, 1972) has been a valued tool
in the arsenal of the organizational scientist. Others have made use of the
brain (Garud and Kotha, 1994), the U.S. civil war (Greenberg, 1995), jazz
(Weick, 1979), catching a ball (Lane, Malerba, et al, 1995), Indian tribes
(Hill and Levenhagen, 1995), and the list goes on. Gersick (1994) writes of
"the difference between an alarm clock and a thermostat as attention
regulating devices" while discussing strategic change within a new
venture. Nonaka (1991, 1994) suggests that knowledge creation is associated
with language and require the creative use of metaphors.
Mental
models matter in that they guide the attention field of managers.
"Managers attend to what they believe is important to their firm's
performance. Their belief may be based on their own or other people' s
attributions.... these mental models will influence attention, and determine
what environmental data is noticed and interpreted, all of which together
constitute a major factor in guiding and directing organizational
activities." (Grohnaug and Lines 1995)
Overman (1996) writes,
"As metaphor, image, language, and patterns of thinking result in
organizational realities.... the use of metaphor is the first path for chaos
and quantum practitioners."
George Johnson (1995)
writing of the complexity researchers at the Santa Fe Institute notes,
"Once a filter is installed in the brain, it bends everything we see.
Gazing out on the jungle, a Darwinist sees the beauty of natural selection... A
structuralist imagines instead a multidimensional fitness landscape... Like all
of us, both are faced with never knowing the extent to which the patterns they
see are out in the world or imposed by the prisms of our nervous
systems."
Complexity theory has its
own language, its own means of describing things. In a 1994 issue of the
Journal of Management Inquiry, several articles were devoted to the concept of
chaos and complexity theory. As Johnson and Burton (1994) phrased it
"Chaos theory and its close cousin, complexity theory, have recently made
their appearance in the social science literature, including studies of
organizations. The trend toward loosely applying nonlinear dynamical theories
to organizations troubles us... The essential problem remains: How should these
concepts be applied?" The editor
of the nontraditional research section of the same issue, Jean Bartunek (1994)
writes, " I have some concerns about the long-term adequacy of the [complexity]
metaphor. It provides intriguing ways of seeing organizational events from new
perspectives. However... without the empirical work that accompanies
it..."
In these concerns lies the
first root of this inquiry. Bartunek concluded her thoughts by stating,
"Further work that attempts not only to make use of the metaphor...but
also to explore its adequacy will be of value." James Begun (1994) in the same issue "describe[s] the
directions in which chaos and complexity theory propel organization science,
and why the field needs that push.... Chaos and complexity theory invite us to
explore the 95% of the organizational world that we have avoided because it is
too dark, murky and intimidating. Or,
our theories and methods simply have not allowed us to see it... For
organization scientists today, this requires that we... overcome distaste of
"controlling tropes" and metaphors to approximate complex
realities..."
Partial List of Lissak’s References
Bartunek, J., 1994, "Editor's
Introduction." Journal of Management Inquiry 3(4): 336-338.
Begun, J. W., 1994, "Chaos
and Complexity: Frontiers of Organization Science." Journal of
Management Inquiry 3(4): 329-335.
Cohen, M., J. March, et al., 1972,
"A garbage can model of organizational choice." Administrative
Science Quarterly 17: 1-25.
Garud, R., 1994, "Using the
Brain as a Metaphor to Model Flexible Production Systems." Academy of
Management Review 19(4): 671-698.
Gersick, C. J. G., 1994,
"Pacing Strategic Change: The Case of a New Venture." Academy of
Management Journal 37(1): 9-45.
Ghoshal, S. and H. Mintzberg,
1994, "Diversifiction and Diversifact." California Management
Review 37(1): 8-27.
Greenberg, D. N. ,1995, "Blue
Versus Gray: A Metaphor Constraining Sensemaking Around a Restructuring." Group
& Organization Management 20(2): 183-209.
Grohnaug, K. and R. Lines, 1995,
"Managerial Focus in Changing Environments." Scandinavian
Journal of Management 11, 3: 283-293.
Hill, R. C. and M. Levenhagen,
1995, "Metaphors and Mental Models: Sensemaking and Sensegiving in
Innovative and Entrepreneurial Activities." Journal of Management
21(6): 1057-1074.
Johnson, G., 1995, Fire in the
Mind. London, Viking.
Johnson, J. L. and B. K. Burton,
1994, "Chaos and Complexity Theory for Management: Caveat Emptor." Journal
of Management Inquiry 3(4): 320-328.
Lane, D., F. Malerba, et al.,
1995, Choice and Action. Santa Fe Institute Working Papers
95-01-004.
March, J. G., 1984, "How we
talk and act: Administrative theory and administrative life," in Leadership
and Organizational Culture, T. J. Sergiovanni and J. E. Corbolly. Urbana,
eds., Univ. of Illinois Press: 18-35.
Morgan, G., 1986, Images of the
Organization, Newbury Park, California, Sage Press.
Nonaka, I., 1991, "The
Knowledge Creating Company." Harvard Business Review, Nov-Dec):
96-104.
Nonaka, I., 1994, "A dynamic
theory of organizational knowledge creation." Organization Science 5:
14-37.
Overman, E. S., 1996, "The
New Science of Management: Chaos and Quantum Theory and Method." Journal
of Public Administration Research and Theory 6, 1): 75-89.
Schön, D. A., 1983, The
reflective practitioner: How professionals think and act. New York, Basic
Books.
Starbuck, W. H. and F. J.
Milliken, 1988, "Executives perceptual filters: What they notice and how
they make sense," in The executive effect: Concepts and methods for
studying top managers, D. C. Hambrick, ed., Greenwich, CT, JAI.
Weick, K. E., 1979, The Social
Psychology of Organizing, 2nd ed., Reading, MA, Addison-Wesley.
Weick, K. E., 1995, Sensemaking
in Organizations. Thousand Oaks, California, Sage Press.
Weick, K. E. and K. H. Roberts,
1993, "Collective Mind in Organizations: Heedful Interrelating on Flight
Decks." Administrative Science Quarterly, September 1993.