Technology and sociomaterial performation

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Abstract

Organizational researchers have acknowledged that understanding the relationship between technology and organization is crucial to understanding modern organizing and organizational change [1]. There has been a significant amount of debate concerning the theoretical foundation of this relationship. Our research draws and extends Deleuze and DeLanda’s work on assemblages and Callon ’s concept of performation to investigate how different sociomaterial practices are changed and stabilized after the implementation of new technology. Our findings from an in-depth study of two ambulatory clinics within a hospital system indicate that “perform-ing” of constituting, counter-performing, calibrating, and stratifying explained the process of sociomaterial change and that this process is governed by an overarching principle of “performative exigency”. Future studies on sociomateriality and change may benefit from a deeper understanding of how sociomaterial assemblages are rendered performative.

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Yeow, A., & Faraj, S. (2014). Technology and sociomaterial performation. In IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology (Vol. 446, pp. 48–65). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-45708-5_4

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