心之最佳运作之处:反应-情感冲突与动物权利组织的颠覆性工作

Where the Heart Functions Best: Reactive–Affective Conflict and the Disruptive Work of Animal Rights Organizations

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2018
被引 48
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究美国动物权利组织如何通过压抑自身情绪来推动颠覆性工作,发现反应-情感冲突促使倡导者在面对面互动中抑制情绪,同时利用视觉材料激发他人情绪。

Abstract

We study the emotive aspect of institutional work performed by U.S. animal rights organizations (AROs) attempting to disrupt industrial practices in modern factory farming operations perceived to be abusive to animals. Drawing on an inductive, qualitative analysis of interviews with ARO advocates, as well as textual and visual archival data collected from AROs' websites, we argue that the suppression of emotion plays a critical role in AROs' disruptive work. We find that advocates are motivated to suppress their emotions by a perceived incompatibility between their reactive emotional displays and their affective commitment to institutional work, or what we label reactive-affective conflict. We show how two triggers of reactive-affective conflict-potential supporters' investment in the status quo and emotive norms governing institutional work-encourage ARO advocates to suppress their emotions in face-to-face interactions with audiences while attempting to elicit emotions via visuals as their strategy of disruptive work. We contribute to the literature on the strategic use of emotion in institutional work by highlighting important relationships between the characteristics of potential supporters, the nature of institutional work, and institutional workers' management of their own emotions to further their institutional projects. In doing so, we add needed nuance to extant conceptualizations of how emotion is strategically deployed as part of purposeful efforts to create, maintain, and disrupt institutions.

组织行为社会心理学制度理论动物权利