Good Order: On the Administration of Goodness
Heather Hopfl. Tamara : Journal of Critical Postmodern Organization Science.
Las Cruces: 2003. Vol. 2, Iss. 3; pg. 28, 8 pgs
Abstract
This paper argues that conventional patriarchal representations of the organisation
reduce the notion of “organisation” to abstract relationships, rational
actions and purposive behaviour which always and relentlessly presents itself
as a quest for the good. In this context, regulation and control is achieved
primarily via definition and location. Administration then functions in a very
specific sense to establish a notion of "good" order, to establish
what is “ordinary” in administrative and managerial practice. In
contrast, this paper seeks to explore ways in which it is possible to restore
the (m)other to the text of organisation, to restore the body. Consequently,
the paper considers the possibility of a discourse of maternity and moves from
this position to examine conceptions of matrix reproduction and conditions of
exile. The paper concludes with a challenge to conventional notions of "good"
management and a consideration of the implications of this for the political
in organisational life.