000 02063cam a2200241 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aGabriel, Yiannis
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aUnder new management
260 _c2012.
500 _a37
520 _aManagement discourses have, since their origins in the works of Taylor and Weber, approached the subject as a resource to be deployed, measured and controlled. Late modernity, however, has spawned a rather different modality of the subject, one that is emotional, meaning-seeking and identity-seeking. This conceptualization derives from an increasing emphasis on consumerism, choice, customer service and the shift from manufacturing to a service economy in which emotion becomes a fundamental aspect of the labour process. In consumerist society, every choice is modelled on consumer choices, and every choice, no matter how trivial, becomes an existential choice – i.e. an identity – and self-defining choice. The author proposes that choice is emerging as the dominant illusion for this subject, an illusion for the sake of which he/she is quite willing to endure high levels of insecurity and frustration; the article concludes with the suggestion that a new psycho-social defence, that of specialness, is overtaking more traditional defences. While earlier defences, rooted in Oedipal dynamics, sacrificed freedom in the interest of security and sought solace in bureaucratic routine, the new defensive configuration accepts uncertainty and unpredictability but envisages an imaginary cloak that defends the subject from the slings and arrows of fortune.
690 _aconsumerism
690 _aidentity
690 _athe defence of spacialness
690 _aemotion
690 _apsychoanalysis
690 _athe subject
690 _achoice
786 0 _nNouvelle revue de psychosociologie | o 13 | 1 | 2012-06-14 | p. 241-264 | 1951-9532
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-nouvelle-revue-de-psychosociologie-2012-1-page-241?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c524428
_d524428