Between Memory and Strategy: Media Discourse Analysis of an Industrial Shutdown
Ahonen, Pasi (2014-12-12)
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Väitöskirja
Ahonen, Pasi
12.12.2014
Lappeenranta University of Technology
Acta Universitatis Lappeenrantaensis
Tiivistelmä
In 2006 UPM was able to gain a level of social legitimacy that allowed it to carry out one of
the largest industrial restructuring programmes in Finnish industrial history, shut down major
operations in Finland and still appear to be functioning in the interests of the nation as well as
itself. This study considers and examines various contexts of this shutdown with the aim of
demonstrating how profoundly mediated such organizational events are though they appear to
be produced primarily through strategic company decisions.
The study aims to examine the processes of mediation at two levels. At one level, through
close analysis of press releases and newspaper reports in local and national newspapers, the
study presents a discursive analysis of the Voikkaa case. The discursive analysis focuses on
providing historical contexts for understanding why this organizational event was also an
occasion for reimagining the past and future of the Finnish nation; spatial contexts for
understanding the differing struggles over the meaning of the event nationally and regionally;
and the temporal dynamics of the media reports.
At another level, the study considers and refines methods for reading and analyzing mediation
in organization studies. Bringing together recent research of media text–based legitimation
studies, emerging research on organizational memory and organizational death and a
Foucaultian analytics of power, this work suggests that organizational research needs to be
less concerned with particular typologies and narratives of shutdowns, and more curious
about the processes of mediation through which organizational events are imagined and
remembered.
the largest industrial restructuring programmes in Finnish industrial history, shut down major
operations in Finland and still appear to be functioning in the interests of the nation as well as
itself. This study considers and examines various contexts of this shutdown with the aim of
demonstrating how profoundly mediated such organizational events are though they appear to
be produced primarily through strategic company decisions.
The study aims to examine the processes of mediation at two levels. At one level, through
close analysis of press releases and newspaper reports in local and national newspapers, the
study presents a discursive analysis of the Voikkaa case. The discursive analysis focuses on
providing historical contexts for understanding why this organizational event was also an
occasion for reimagining the past and future of the Finnish nation; spatial contexts for
understanding the differing struggles over the meaning of the event nationally and regionally;
and the temporal dynamics of the media reports.
At another level, the study considers and refines methods for reading and analyzing mediation
in organization studies. Bringing together recent research of media text–based legitimation
studies, emerging research on organizational memory and organizational death and a
Foucaultian analytics of power, this work suggests that organizational research needs to be
less concerned with particular typologies and narratives of shutdowns, and more curious
about the processes of mediation through which organizational events are imagined and
remembered.
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