How Aesthetics and Economy Become Conversant in Creative Firms

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Abstract

Research on creative organizations often highlights a concern that economic influences on creative work might crowd out aesthetic influences. How this concern can be managed, however, is not well understood. Using a case study of an economic/aesthetic conflict within a design firm, we develop theory to describe how the economic and aesthetic can be constructively combined. We propose the concept of conversation as a way of theorizing a constructed sociality via which creative firms manage this conflict; we also propose the concept of ensemble as a way of theorizing a conversationally nurtured but fragile form of intensified sociality that most successfully combines conflicting influences when it can be achieved. Together, these theoretical conceptualizations contribute new insights and help organize a fragmented landscape of ideas about work in creative firms.

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Austin, R., Hjorth, D., & Hessel, S. (2018). How Aesthetics and Economy Become Conversant in Creative Firms. Organization Studies, 39(11), 1501–1519. https://doi.org/10.1177/0170840617736940

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