Knowledge and discourse matters : relocating knowledge management’s sphere of interest onto language /: relocating knowledge management’s sphere of interest onto language. ([2016])
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Knowledge and discourse matters : relocating knowledge management’s sphere of interest onto language /: relocating knowledge management’s sphere of interest onto language. ([2016])
- Main Title:
- Knowledge and discourse matters : relocating knowledge management’s sphere of interest onto language
- Further Information:
- Note: Lesley Crane, PhD MA BSc Hons.
- Authors:
- Crane, Lesley (Lesley Margaret), 1960-
- Contents:
- List of Figures and Tables xv Foreword xvii Acknowledgments xxiii Introduction 1 PART ONE 7 1 The Nature of Knowledge 9 1.1 Knowledge: The Most Precious Asset and the Greatest Challenge 9 1.2 Why an Understanding of the Nature of Knowledge is Crucial 10 1.3 Ways of Defining Knowledge and the Rise of a Single Perspective 12 1.3.1 Knowledge: “Thing” or “Action”? 13 1.3.2 The Subjective versus Objective 14 1.3.3 Organizational versus Personal Knowledge 16 1.4 The Tacit–Explicit Conundrum 16 1.4.1 What Did Polanyi Really Say? 18 1.4.2 The Importance of Context: What Context and Whose Context? 19 1.4.3 A Preference for “Knowing” as Action 21 1.5 Frameworks of Meaning 22 1.6 A Hierarchy of Knowledge 23 1.7 Summary and Conclusions 24 Further Reading 25 2 The Constitution of Knowledge Management 27 2.1 . Addressing Some Key Questions 27 2.2 The Origins of Knowledge Management 28 2.3 Multiple Perspectives and Limitless Boundaries 29 2.3.1 The Organization as a Body of Knowledge 30 2.3.2 Gulf between Practice and Academia 30 2.3.3 Knowledge Management from the Perspective of the Learning Organization 30 2.3.4 The Systemic Approach and Connections to Social Interaction 31 2.4 Is it a Passing Management Fad? 31 2.5 Technology as a Defining “Push Factor” 32 2.6 Should Knowledge be Managed? 34 2.7 Summary and Conclusions 35 Further Reading 36 3 Key Issues and Debates 37 3.1 Introduction 37 3.2 The Commodification and Reification of Knowledge 38 3.3 Determining Success or Failure 39 3.4List of Figures and Tables xv Foreword xvii Acknowledgments xxiii Introduction 1 PART ONE 7 1 The Nature of Knowledge 9 1.1 Knowledge: The Most Precious Asset and the Greatest Challenge 9 1.2 Why an Understanding of the Nature of Knowledge is Crucial 10 1.3 Ways of Defining Knowledge and the Rise of a Single Perspective 12 1.3.1 Knowledge: “Thing” or “Action”? 13 1.3.2 The Subjective versus Objective 14 1.3.3 Organizational versus Personal Knowledge 16 1.4 The Tacit–Explicit Conundrum 16 1.4.1 What Did Polanyi Really Say? 18 1.4.2 The Importance of Context: What Context and Whose Context? 19 1.4.3 A Preference for “Knowing” as Action 21 1.5 Frameworks of Meaning 22 1.6 A Hierarchy of Knowledge 23 1.7 Summary and Conclusions 24 Further Reading 25 2 The Constitution of Knowledge Management 27 2.1 . Addressing Some Key Questions 27 2.2 The Origins of Knowledge Management 28 2.3 Multiple Perspectives and Limitless Boundaries 29 2.3.1 The Organization as a Body of Knowledge 30 2.3.2 Gulf between Practice and Academia 30 2.3.3 Knowledge Management from the Perspective of the Learning Organization 30 2.3.4 The Systemic Approach and Connections to Social Interaction 31 2.4 Is it a Passing Management Fad? 31 2.5 Technology as a Defining “Push Factor” 32 2.6 Should Knowledge be Managed? 34 2.7 Summary and Conclusions 35 Further Reading 36 3 Key Issues and Debates 37 3.1 Introduction 37 3.2 The Commodification and Reification of Knowledge 38 3.3 Determining Success or Failure 39 3.4 Measuring Knowledge Management Outcomes 41 3.5 Knowledge Management and Culture 42 3.6 Creating New Knowledge 43 3.7 Sharing Knowledge 45 3.8 Summary and . Conclusions 48 Further Reading 50 4 Knowledge Management’s Theories 53 4.1 Finding Some New Directions 53 4.2 What Constitutes a Theory? 55 4.3 An Approach to Knowledge Management’s Theories: A Novel Taxonomy 56 4.4 The Personal versus Organizational Knowledge Question 60 4.5 The Personal versus Organizational Knowledge on the Social Action Axis 62 4.5.1 Personal Knowledge as the Unit of Analysis 62 4.5.2 Knowledge as Practice Contrasted with Knowledge as Possession 63 4.5.3 Connecting the “Organizational” with the “Personal”: Social, Situated, and Constructed 64 4.5.4 Knowledge, Activity Theory, . and Activity Systems 65 4.5.5 The Phenomenological Perspective 66 4.5.6 “Know(ing) How” and “Know(ing) That” and Communities of Practice 67 4.5.7 Creative Abrasion 68 4.6 Reification of Knowledge: One Paradigm Dominates 69 4.6.1 “The Theory” and the Theorist as Bricoleur 69 4.6.2 Shuffling Ideas 71 4.6.3 Misinterpretation and Misrepresentation 71 4.6.4 [More Troubling Observations on the Theory of the Knowledge?]Creating Firm 73 4.7 Roundup of Some Other Perspectives in the “Knowledge as Object” Spectrum 74 4.8 The Issues Over the Inductionist Foundation of Theory 75 4.9 Summary and Conclusions 76 Further Reading 78 5 Social Constructionism and the Constructionist View of Knowledge 79 5.1 Introduction 79 5.2 Social Constructionism as a Way of Looking at the World 80 5.3 Simply Extending Existing Directions 81 5.4 The Social Constructionist View . of Knowledge 83 5.5 The Debate Over Method 84 5.6 On Objectivity 86 5.7 Summary and Conclusions 87 Further Reading 88 6 Discourse as the Site of Knowledge Work 89 6.1 Introduction and the Turn to Talk 89 6.2 Introducing Discursive Psychology 91 6.2.1 Origins 91 6.2.2 Discursive Psychology’s Core Assumptions 91 6.2.3 Emerging Ideas 92 6.2.4 The Thorny Issue of Variation 93 6.3 Other Leading Paradigms in Discourse Analysis 94 6.3.1 Critical Discourse Analysis 94 6.3.2 Conversation Analysis 95 6.3.3 Membership Categorization Analysis 96 6.4 Topics of Study in Discourse Analysis 96 6.4.1 Discourse and Identity 97 6.4.2 Discourse and Gender 101 6.4.3 Discourse and Computer Mediated Communications 103 6.5 Sensemaking 107 6.6 Summary and Conclusions 109 Further Reading 110 7 The Implicit Formulation of Tacit Knowing and . Resolving Matters of Relevance 113 7.1 Introduction: Questions and Connections 113 7.2 The Origins of the “Tacit Question” 115 7.3 The Values of Tacit Knowledge 117 7.4 A Disputed Phenomenon 118 7.5 Knowledge Management’s “Implicit Formulation” of Tacit Knowledge 119 7.6 The Implicit Learning Paradigm 120 7.6.1 The “Polanyi Connection” 121 7.6.2 The Challenge of Researching the Unspeakable: Research Paradigms in Implicit Learning 122 7.6.3 Unconscious and Natural 123 7.6.4 An Abstractionist Model 124 7.6.5 Automaticity and Influence 125 7.6.6 An Ancient Evolved System 126 7.6.7 Some Spanners in the Implicit Learning Theory Works 126 7.7 Comparing Knowledge Management’s Perspectives on the Tacit with the IL Formulation 128 7.8 Philosophy, Methodology, . and Incommensurability 128 7.8.1 A Divergence of Approach 130 7.8.2 Reconciling Two Opposing Fields 131 7.9 Summary and Conclusions 132 Further Reading 134 8 Thematic Categories of Knowledge Sharing 135 8.1 Introduction 135 8.2 Identity 136 8.3 Trust 137 8.4 Risk 138 8.5 Context 139 8.6 A Final Problem to Resolve 140 8.7 Summary 141 Further Reading 141 9 The Case for Discourse as the Priority 143 9.1 Knowledge and Discourse Matters: Summarizing the Case 143 9.2 Changes in Direction? 146 9.3 Making it Work: Implications and Contributions 147 9.4 Conclusions 148 PART TWO 151 10 Introduction to Part Two 153 11 Methodology 155 11.1 Introduction 155 11.2 Locating the Present Study 156 11.3 A Brief Digress into the Positivist Account of Science 158 11.4 Research Method 159 . 11.4.1 An Explanation of the Method 159 11.4.2 Grounds for Criticism and the Issue of Measuring Quality 161 11.5 Research Design 163 11.5.1 Design 163 11.5.2 Research Data 168 11.5.3 Participants and Ethical Considerations 169 11.6 Points of Limitation 171 11.7 Summary and Indicative Research Questions 172 Further Reading 172 12 Trust as an Artifact of Knowledge Sharing 173 12.1 The Importance of Trust 173 12.2 Data 175 12.3 Casting the Characters and Setting the Scene for Action 176 12.4 Working up Trust Through Epistemic Superiority and Authenticity 178 12.4.1 Emerging Challenge 178 12.4.2 Competing Strategies for Conjuring Trust 180 12.4.3 Avoiding Direct Challenge by Reformulating the Problem 181 12.5 Risk and Competence as Contingent Factors to Trust 182 12.5.1 Calling on Witnesses to Work Up Persuasion 182 12.5.2 Two Competing Versions of . the Same Witness Accounts 185 12.5.3 Issuing Challenges to Competency and Undermining Trust 185 12.6 Trust Breakdown Connects with Knowledge Sharing Breaches 186 12.6.1 Factual Accounting as a Warrant for Trust 186 12.6.2 A Breach in Knowledge Sharing Comes to the Fore 188 12.7 Knowledge, Trust, and Blame 189 12.7.1 Issuing the. … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- Hoboken, New Jersey : Wiley
- Publication Date:
- 2016
- Extent:
- 1 online resource, 2 illustrations (black and white, and colour)
- Subjects:
- 658.4038
Knowledge management
Discourse analysis - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781119079514
- Related ISBNs:
- 9781118931851
- Notes:
- Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.46433
- Ingest File:
- 01_038.xml