Record Details

Academentia, management and satire: ‘The good, the bad and the ugly’

Acta Commercii

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Academentia, management and satire: ‘The good, the bad and the ugly’
 
Creator Tomaselli, Keyan G.
 
Subject — academic corporatisation; critical management studies; university management; autoethnography; academentia; transformation; South Africa
Description Orientation: The argument rethinks current managerial practices in higher education.Research purpose: Satire beckons when normal science cannot reproduce itself or shift to account for different ways of doing things. When reality mimics satire, satire becomes an appropriate methodology. Such literary approaches can reveal what normal science cannot.Motivation for the study: To add to critical management studies and the combatting of academentia as an institutional condition.Research design, approach and method: The general methodology derives from both literary and business principles read through critical management studies and cultural studies. Autoethnography is shown here to be useful within accounting and management studies. The Semler and the Kalahari management practices explicitly specify the need to rethink ‘operational models’.Main findings: No findings are offered in the conventional sense. Rather, relations are analysed and conclusions result from my own internal dialogue as a central player in the case study. The ‘transformation’ objectives of governance were disconnected from educational purposes. The resulting dramatic narrative hopefully appeals to readers in terms of their own lived conditions: can readers insert themselves into the narrative in terms of their own experiences?Practical and/or managerial implications: Institutions to be managed as adhocracies. What has been learned after 20 years of transformation and restructuring, if anything?Contribution and/or value-add: An engagement with critical management studies from the perspective of cultural studies identifies some solutions. Like the former, the latter examines issues of power relations, in this case, relations subsisting within administrative systems rather than the more usual framing as being between classes, races, ethnicities and genders.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2024-10-09
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — —
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/ac.v24i1.1291
 
Source Acta Commercii; Vol 24, No 1 (2024); 11 pages 1684-1999 2413-1903
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1291/2346 https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1291/2347 https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1291/2348 https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1291/2349
 
Coverage — — —
Rights Copyright (c) 2024 Keyan G. Tomaselli https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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