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The Use of Concepts: Choosing and Unfolding Concepts in PhD Theses - 5 ECTS
Date and time
Tuesday 11 June 2024 at 09:30 to Friday 14 June 2024 at 17:00
Registration Deadline
Monday 6 May 2024 at 23:55
Location
Porcelænshaven - room PH18B 1.18 (first floor),
Porcelænshaven 18B,
2000 Frederiksberg
Porcelænshaven - room PH18B 1.18 (first floor)
Porcelænshaven 18B
2000 Frederiksberg
The Use of Concepts: Choosing and Unfolding Concepts in PhD Theses - 5 ECTS
Course coordinator: Kaspar Villadsen, Department of Business Humanities and Law (BHL)
Professor Bent Meier Sørensen
Department of Business Humanities and Law, CBS
Associate Professor Justine Grønbæk Pors
Department of Business Humanities and Law, CBS
Associate Professor Stefan Schwartzkopf
Department of Business Humanities and Law, CBS
Professor with special responsibilities Kaspar Villadsen
Department of Business Humanities and Law, CBS
Prerequisites
Only PhD students can participate in the course.
The course will provide the participants with:
Concepts are the building blocks of academic research. And yet we often fail to understand properly how to use conceptual frameworks in order to advance our research. Max Weber made a conceptual breakthrough in his study on ‘the protestant Ethic’, Michel Foucault’s writings on ‘discipline’ and ‘governmentality’ and Ulrich Bech’s notion of ‘risk society’. The use of strong concepts makes a difference on the impact of our work in the research community and beyond.
The goal is to sharpen the conceptual apparatus in the dissertations. To that end we will set aside sufficient time to carefully examine and discuss the papers submitted by the participants.
The course will consist of both lectures/presentations by scholars who are specialist in a series of key thinkers’ use of concepts. The goal of the lectures is, first, to clarify the ways in which the thinker in question defined and employed their most significant concepts and, second, to suggest and demonstrate how to put the concepts at work in specific analysis. In the afternoon, there will be workshops that aim to explore how concepts function in each participant’s research/dissertation – with the aim of strengthening, deepening and nuancing the conceptual dimension of the dissertations/research (articles).
Papers/abstracts must be in English. Deadline is 31 May 2024.
Day 1
9.30 - 12.00 Introduction to the course. Heidegger’s philosophical work on concepts
- Kaspar Villadsen
12.00 - 13.00 Lunch
13.00 - 15.00 Conceptual history: Writing histories for the present
- Stefan Schwarzkopf
- Kaspar Villadsen & Stefan Schwarzkopf
Day 2
9.30 - 12.00 Conceptual Activism: Taking the lead from Deleuze
- Bent Meier Sørensen
12.00 - 13.00 Lunch
13.00 - 15.00 Using concepts ‘like Molotov cocktails’: Learning from Foucault’s writing
- Kaspar Villadsen
15.00 - 17.00 Papers from PhD scholars
-Kaspar Villadsen & Bent Meier Sørensen
Day 3
9.30 - 12.00 Derrida and deconstruction as analytical strategy
- Justine Grønbæk Pors
12.00 - 13.00 Lunch
13.00 - 15.00 Using abstract theory in case studies: Letting the material ‘unfold’ the concept
- Kaspar Villadsen
15.00 - 17.00 Papers from PhD scholars
- Kaspar Villadsen & Justine Grønbæk Pors
Day 4
9.30 - 12.00 Combining various concepts: The case of norm-violating leadership
-- Bent Meier Sørensen & Kaspar Villadsen
12.00 - 13.00 Lunch
13.00 - 15.00 Comparing conceptual strategies
- Kaspar Villadsen
15.00 - 17.00 Concluding discussion and evaluation
-Kaspar Villadsen
• Achieve a strong reflexivity regarding how the choice of concepts brings certain questions, problems, entities and processes into the foreground while others recede into the background
For Kaspar Villadsen’s session (Tuesday):
• Heidegger, M. (1978) “The Question Concerning Technology”. In The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays, by Martin Heidegger, pp. 3-36. New York: Garland Publishing.
• Deleuze, G. and Guattari, F. (1994) What Is Philosophy? New York: Columbia University Press (especially chapters 1-4).
• Johnsen, C. G. & Sørensen, B. M. (2014) “‘It's capitalism on coke!’: From temporary to permanent liminality in organization studies.” Culture and Organization, 21(4): 321-337.
• Koselleck, R. (1982) “Begriffsgeschichte and Social History.” Economy and Society, 11(4): 409-427.
• Bothello and Salles-Djelic (2018) “Evolving conceptualizations of organizational environmentalism: a path generation account.” Organization Studies, 39(1).
For Justine Pors Grønbæk’s session (Thursday):
• Derrida, J. (2000) “Hospitality.” Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities, 5(3): 3-18.
• Foucault, M. (1982) "The Subject and Power." Critical Inquiry, 8(4): 777-795.
• Karlsen, M.P. & Villadsen, K. (2008) “Who Should Do the Talking?: The proliferation of dialoque as governmental technology.” Culture and Organization, 14(4): 345-363.
• Sørensen, B. M. and Villadsen, K. (2018) “Penis-twirling and Pie-throwing: Norm-setting and Norm-defying Drama in the Creative Industries.” Human Relations, 71(8): 1049-1071.
Note: In case we receive more registrations for the course than we have seats, CBS PhD students will have first priority. Remaining seats will be filled on a first come first serve.
Registration deadline and conditions
The registration deadline is 30 April 2024. If you want to cancel your registration on the course it should be done prior to this mentioned date. By this date we determine whether we have enough registrations to run the course, or who should be offered a seat if we have received too many registrations.
If there are more seats available on the course we leave the registration open by setting a new regsitration deadline in order to fill remaining seats. Once you have received our acceptance/welcome letter to join the course, your registration is binding and we do not refund your course fee. The binding registration date will be the registration deadline mentioned above.
Event Location
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Organizer Contact Information
CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen
Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk
Organizer Contact Information
CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen
Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk