Title: Organisational Aesthetics andSubjectivity: A Lacanian DiscourseAnalysis
Abstract: This thesis addresses the questions of subjectivity and aesthetics as two aspects of
identity-centred new work practices. To date, they have not been convincingly integrated
due to the incompatibility of the dominant conceptualisations in these two literatures.
Drawing on Lacan’s theory of discourse, this thesis attempts to address these two questions
within an integrative conceptual framework.
The literature on identity work and organisational aesthetics dominantly considers new
work practices as a subtler system of control which relies on the logic of identification; that
is, controlling from within by rendering an idealised image with which employees identify.
This thesis, however, goes beyond this logic to interrogate subjectivity and aesthetics from
a structural point of view. Drawing on Lacan’s conception of discourse as the structure of
the social bond, this thesis exposes the discursive formation of subjectivity in one
bureaucratic and two post-bureaucratic cases. Furthermore, in this thesis the question of
aesthetics is considered as part of the dominant discursive formation in the case studies.
Thus, this thesis uses Lacan’s graph of discourse as an ontological foundation, or a
gravitational force, within which the questions of subjectivity and aesthetics can be
addressed.
This thesis approaches post-bureaucracies as part of the neo-liberalist agenda where
the subject is under increasing pressure to construct a self-governing and thus employable
self. Post-bureaucracies, according to my analysis, are identity workspaces where work
becomes a stage to actualise self-potential. Putting desire and enjoyment at the centre,
this thesis unravels the focal position of desire in this process. The subjects’ desire to
actualise self-potential leads to the formation of a subjectivity apparatus that produces
self-governing subjects who desire work since they consider work as the primary stage for
self-actualisation. Therefore, desire becomes a crucial productive element since actualising
self-potential (through work) indicates the subjects’ higher investment in work. This also
intensifies the accumulation of capital (knowledge, aesthetics, and a subjectivity
apparatus) within the organisation. This thesis, also, questions aesthetics within this
broader picture by uncovering its function as the mise-en-scene of the politics of selfactualisation.
This study contributes to critical organisational studies by introducing Lacan’s theory of
discourse as the ontological foundation as well as a powerful methodological tool to
interrogate the structure of subjectivity and the formation and functioning of aesthetics in
post-bureaucracy. Drawing on the late Lacan’s teaching, this study uncovers a more
nuanced picture of post-bureaucracies, its impact on workers and management, and their
implications for ethics at work. The key point in this regard is the contribution of a fresh
Lacanian perspective to expose how power relations are increasingly concealed behind the
seemingly pleasant working environment. This leads to a vicious self-criticising circle in
which the subject takes full responsibility for collective dysfunctions. It, also, contributes to
critical studies as an emancipatory project by revealing the truth of the seemingly win-win
situation of trust-based and employee-oriented workspaces as the truth of exploitation.
Publication Year: 2020
Publication Date: 2020-07-31
Language: en
Type: dissertation
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