What Do Corporations Want?
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Timothy Kuhn
About this book
Winner of the National Ccommunication Association's Outstanding Monograph award, Organizational Communication Division, 2025 'Corporate purpose' has become a battleground for stakeholders’ competing desires. Some argue that corporations must simply generate profit; others suggest that we must make them create social change. Leading organization studies scholar Timothy Kuhn argues that this 'either/or' thinking dramatically oversimplifies matters: today’s corporations must be many things, all at once. Kuhn offers a bold new Communicative Theory of the Firm to highlight the authority that creates corporations’ identities and activities. The theory provides a roadmap for navigating that battleground of competing desires to produce more responsive corporations. Drawing on communicative and new materialist theorizing, along with three insightful case studies, this book thoroughly redefines our understandings of what corporations are 'for'.
Topics
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Front Matter
i -
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Contents
iii -
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List of Figures and Tables
iv -
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Acknowledgements
v -
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Preface
vii -
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Introduction
1 -
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New Forms of Value Generation Under Communicative Capitalism
24 -
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Why an Alternative Theory of the Firm?
43 -
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Assembling an Analytical Apparatus: CCO Encounters Deleuzian New Materialism
58 -
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A Communicative Theory of the Firm
85 -
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Boundarying: Inclusion and Exclusion in Dynamic Capability (Re)Development
119 -
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Branding: Hindering Heterarchy in a Startup Accelerator
146 -
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Binding: Collective Atomization and B Corps
170 -
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A New Future for the Theory of the Firm
194 -
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References
212 -
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Index
242