BojeD. (2001) Narrative Methods for Organizational and Communication Research.London: Sage.
13.
BrewisJ. and LinsteadS. (2000) Sex, Work and Sex Work: Eroticizing Organization.London: Routledge.
14.
BurrellG. (1988) ‘Modernism, post modernism and organizational analysis 2: The contribution of Michel Foucault’Organization Studies, 9(2): 221–235.
15.
BurrellG. (1994) ‘Modernism, post modernism and organizational analysis 4: The contribution of Jürgen Habermas’Organization Studies, 15(1): 1–19.
16.
BurrellG. and MorganG. (1979) Sociological Paradigms and Organizational Analysis: Elements of the Sociology of Corporate Life.London: Heineman.
17.
ButlerJ. (2004) ‘Can the “other” of philosophy speak?’ in Undoing Gender.London: Routledge.
18.
CalásM. and SmircichL. (1999) ‘Past postmodernism? Reflections and tentative directions’, Academy of Management Review, 24(4): 649–671.
19.
CalásM. and SmircichL. (eds.) (1997) Postmodern Management Theory.Aldershot: Ashgate/Dartmouth.
20.
CaseP.LilleyS. and OwensT. (eds.) (forthcoming) The Speed of Organization.Copenhagen: Copenhagen Business School Press.
21.
CleggS. (1989) Frameworks of Power.London: Sage.
22.
CleggS. (ed.) (2002) Central Currents in Organization Studies (8 vols.). London: Sage.
23.
CleggS.HardyC. and NordW. (eds.) (1996) The Handbook of Organization Studies.London: Sage.
24.
CooperR. (1989) ‘Modernism, post modernism and organizational analysis 3: The contribution of Jacques Derrida’Organization Studies, 10(4): 479–502.
25.
CooperR. and BurrellG. (1988) ‘Modernism, postmodernism and organizational analysis: An introduction’Organization Studies, 9(1): 91–112.
26.
CzarniawskaB. (1999) Writing Management: Organization Theory as a Literary Genre.Oxford: Oxford University Press.
27.
Czarniawska-JoergesB. (1998) A Narrative Approach to Organization Studies.London: Sage.
28.
Czarniawska-JoergesB. and de MonthouxP. Guillet (1994) Good Novels, Better Management: Reading Organizational Realities.Chur: Harwood.
29.
DavisG.McAdamD.ScottW. R. and ZaldM. (2005) Social Movements and Organization Theory.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
30.
DonaldsonL. (1985) In Defence of Organization Theory: A Reply to the Critics.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
31.
EdgellS.HetheringtonK. and WardeA. (eds.) (1996) Consumption Matters: The Production and Experience of Consumption.Oxford: Blackwell.
32.
FerreeM. M. and MartinP. Y. (1995) Feminist Organizations: Harvest of the New Women's Political Economy.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
33.
FoucaultM. (1970) The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences, trans. SmithA. S.London: Routledge.
34.
FoucaultM. (1977) ‘What is an author?’ in BouchardD. (ed.) Language, Counter-Memory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews, trans. BouchardD. and SimonS.Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
35.
FoucaultM. (1991) Remarks on Marx: Conversations with Duccio Trombadori, trans. GoldsteinJ. and CascaitoJ.New York: Semiotext(e).
36.
GabrielY. (2000) Storytelling in Organizations: Facts, Fictions and Fantasies.Oxford: Oxford University Press.
37.
GrantD. and OswickC. (eds.) (1996) Metaphor and Organizations.London: Sage.
38.
GrantD.OswickC.HardyC. and PutnamL. (eds.) (2004) Handbook of Organizational Discourse.London: Sage.
39.
GrantD.KeenoyT. and OswickC. (eds.) (1998) Discourse and Organization.London: Sage.
40.
GrintK. and WoolgarS. (1997) The Machine at Work: Technology, Work and Organization.Oxford: Polity.
41.
HancockP. and TylerM. (2001) Work, Postmodernism and Organization: A Critical Introduction.London: Sage.
42.
HarneyS. (2002) State Work: Public Administration and Mass Intellectuality.Durham: Duke University Press.
43.
HarneyS. (forthcoming) Management and Fugitivity: A Critique of Immaterial Political Economy.New York: Routledge.
44.
HassardJ. and PymD. (eds.) (1990) The Theory and Philosophy of Organizations: Critical Issues and New Perspectives.London: Routledge.
45.
HassardJ. and ParkerM. (eds.) (1993) Postmodernism and Organizations.London: Sage.
46.
HassardJ. and ParkerM. (eds.) (1994) Towards and New Theory of Organization.London: Routledge.
47.
HassardJ. and HolidayR. (eds.) (1998) Organization-Representation: Work and Organizations in Popular Culture.London: Sage.
48.
HassardJ.HolidayR. and WillmottH. (eds.) (2000) Body and Organization.London: Sage.
49.
HearnJ. and ParkinW. (eds.) (2001) Gender, Sexuality and Violence in Organizations.London: Sage.
50.
HearnJ.SheppardD.Tancred-SherriffP. and BurrellG. (eds.) (1989) The Sexuality of Organization.London: Sage.
51.
HetheringtonK. and MunroR. (eds.) (1997) Ideas of Difference: Social Spaces and the Labour of Division.Oxford: Blackwell.
52.
JermierJ.KnightsD. and NordW. (eds.) (1994) Resistance and Power in Organizations.London: Routledge.
53.
JonesC. (2003a) ‘As if business ethics were possible, “within such limits” …’Organization, 10(2): 223–248.
54.
JonesC. (2003b) ‘Theory after the postmodern condition’Organization, 10(3): 503–525.
55.
JonesC. (2004a) ‘Jacques Derrida’ in LinsteadStephen (ed.) Organization Theory and Postmodern Thought.London: Sage.
56.
JonesC. (2004b) ‘The archive and its other’ephemera: theory and politics in organization, 4(1): 50–58.
57.
JonesC. and BöhmS. (2002) ‘Hors d'oeuvre’ephemera: critical dialogues on organization2(4): 277–280.
58.
JonesC. and BöhmS. (2004) ‘Handle with care’ephemera: theory and politics in organization4(1): 1–6.
59.
JonesC.ParkerM. and ten BosR. (2005) For Business Ethics.London: Routledge.
60.
KilduffM. and MehraA. (1997) ‘Postmodernism and organizational research’, Academy of Management Review, 22(2): 453–481.
61.
KnightsD. and WillmottH. (1999) Management Lives: Power and Identity in Work Organizations.London: Sage.
62.
LatourB. (1993) We Have Never Been Modern.London: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
63.
LawJ. (ed.) (1986) Power, Action, and Belief: A New Sociology of Knowledge?Oxford: Blackwell.
64.
LawJ. (ed.) (1991) A Sociology of Monsters: Essays on Power, Technology and Domination.Oxford: Blackwell.
LawJ. and HassardJ. (eds.) (1999) Actor Network Theory and After.Oxford: Blackwell.
67.
LeeN. and MunroR. (eds.) (2001) The Consumption of Mass.Oxford: Blackwell.
68.
LilleyS.LightfootG. and AmaralP. (2004) Representing Organization: Knowledge, Management and the Information Age.Oxford: Oxford University Press.
69.
LinsteadA. and LinsteadS. (eds.) (2005) Organization and Identity.London: Routledge.
70.
LinsteadS. (ed.) (2004) Organization Theory and Postmodern Thought.London: Sage.
71.
LinsteadS. (ed.) (2005) Text/Work: Representing Organization and Organizing Representation.London: Routledge.
72.
LinsteadS. and HöpflH. (eds.) (2000) The Aesthetics of Organization.London: Sage.
73.
ManghamI. and OveringtonM. (1987) Organizations as Theatre: A Social Psychology of Dramatic Appearances.Chichester: Wiley.
74.
MoninN. (2004) Management Theory: A Critical and Reflexive Reading.London: Routledge.
75.
MorganG. (1986) Images of Organization.London: Sage.
76.
MunroR. (1996) ‘A consumption view of self: Extension, exchange and identity’ in EdgellS.HetheringtonK. and WardeA. (eds.) Consumption Matters: The Production and Experience of Consumption.Oxford: Blackwell.
77.
MunroR. (1998) ‘Ethics and accounting: The dual technologies of self’ in ParkerM. (ed.) Ethics and Organizations.London: Sage.
78.
MunroR. (2001) ‘Calling for accounts: Numbers, monsters and membership’Sociological Review, 49(4): 473–493.