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Embodying sensemaking: Learning from the extreme case of Vann Nath, prisoner at S-21

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Stewart Clegg

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Abstract

The sensemaking literature offered important critical insights to the understanding of organizing. These have been underpinned by two foundational assumptions. First, sensemaking is predominantly a higher order cognitive process. Second, it is a process desired and desirable. Considering the account of Vann Nath as prisoner of the S-21 extermination center during the Khmer Rouge regime, we challenge these assumptions and argue that, in some cases, sensemaking is fundamentally a bodily and emotional process, one that is undesired and blocked by the organization in which it takes place. The shift in perspective triggered by an extreme context has pertinent implications for the understanding of sensemaking in other, non-extreme organizational circumstances.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Cunha MP, Clegg SR, Rego A, Gomes JFS

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: European Management Review

Year: 2015

Volume: 12

Issue: 1

Pages: 41-58

Online publication date: 05/03/2015

ISSN (print): 1740-4754

ISSN (electronic): 1740-4762

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/emre.12041/abstract

DOI: 10.1111/emre.12041


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