Culture, Innovation and Entrepreneurship
New Directions in Theory and Research
Herausgeber: Lounsbury, Michael; Granqvist, Nina; Cornelissen, Joep
Culture, Innovation and Entrepreneurship
New Directions in Theory and Research
Herausgeber: Lounsbury, Michael; Granqvist, Nina; Cornelissen, Joep
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Culture, Innovation and Entrepreneurship provides cutting-edge theoretical and empirical insights about how culture shapes innovation and entrepreneurship.
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Culture, Innovation and Entrepreneurship provides cutting-edge theoretical and empirical insights about how culture shapes innovation and entrepreneurship.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 621g
- ISBN-13: 9780367640002
- ISBN-10: 0367640007
- Artikelnr.: 69983008
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 621g
- ISBN-13: 9780367640002
- ISBN-10: 0367640007
- Artikelnr.: 69983008
Michael Lounsbury is Professor and the Canada Research Chair in Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the University of Alberta School of Business. He is the series editor of 'Research in the Sociology of Organizations' and is well-known for his pioneering research on cultural entrepreneurship and institutional logics. Joep Cornelissen is Professor of Corporate Communication and Management at Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University. His research focuses on corporate and managerial communication in the context of innovation, entrepreneurship and change. His best-selling book, Corporate Communication: A Guide to Theory and Practice, is now in its 6th edition. Nina Granqvist is Associate Professor at the Aalto University School of Business. Her research focuses on how new markets emerge and develop in contexts such as solar energy, nanotechnology, material sciences and food. Her work theoretically contributes to our understanding of institutions, symbolic management, categorization, temporality and narratives. Stine Grodal is Distinguished Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Northeastern University D'Amore-McKim School of Business. Her research examines the emergence and evolution of markets and industries with a specific focus on the strategies firms and other industry stakeholders use to shape and exploit new market categories.
1. Culture, innovation and entrepreneurship 2. Entrepreneurship by design:
the construction of meanings and markets for cultural craft goods 3. Taking
Sigmund Freud to the Guggenheim: the religio-erotic production of Frank
Lloyd Wright 4. Who is more likely to walk the talk? The symbolic
management of entrepreneurial intentions by gender and work status 5.
Framing innovation practices in interstitial issue fields: open innovation
in the NYC administration 6. When the petting zoo spawns into monsters:
open dialogue and a venture's legitimacy quest in crowdfunding 7.
Generative imitation, strategic distancing and optimal distinctiveness
during the growth, decline and stabilization of Silicon Alley 8. A
double-edged sword: cultural entrepreneurship and the mobilisation of
morally tainted cultural resources 9. Venturing into the cultural future:
research opportunities at the nexus of institutions, innovation and impact
the construction of meanings and markets for cultural craft goods 3. Taking
Sigmund Freud to the Guggenheim: the religio-erotic production of Frank
Lloyd Wright 4. Who is more likely to walk the talk? The symbolic
management of entrepreneurial intentions by gender and work status 5.
Framing innovation practices in interstitial issue fields: open innovation
in the NYC administration 6. When the petting zoo spawns into monsters:
open dialogue and a venture's legitimacy quest in crowdfunding 7.
Generative imitation, strategic distancing and optimal distinctiveness
during the growth, decline and stabilization of Silicon Alley 8. A
double-edged sword: cultural entrepreneurship and the mobilisation of
morally tainted cultural resources 9. Venturing into the cultural future:
research opportunities at the nexus of institutions, innovation and impact
1. Culture, innovation and entrepreneurship 2. Entrepreneurship by design:
the construction of meanings and markets for cultural craft goods 3. Taking
Sigmund Freud to the Guggenheim: the religio-erotic production of Frank
Lloyd Wright 4. Who is more likely to walk the talk? The symbolic
management of entrepreneurial intentions by gender and work status 5.
Framing innovation practices in interstitial issue fields: open innovation
in the NYC administration 6. When the petting zoo spawns into monsters:
open dialogue and a venture's legitimacy quest in crowdfunding 7.
Generative imitation, strategic distancing and optimal distinctiveness
during the growth, decline and stabilization of Silicon Alley 8. A
double-edged sword: cultural entrepreneurship and the mobilisation of
morally tainted cultural resources 9. Venturing into the cultural future:
research opportunities at the nexus of institutions, innovation and impact
the construction of meanings and markets for cultural craft goods 3. Taking
Sigmund Freud to the Guggenheim: the religio-erotic production of Frank
Lloyd Wright 4. Who is more likely to walk the talk? The symbolic
management of entrepreneurial intentions by gender and work status 5.
Framing innovation practices in interstitial issue fields: open innovation
in the NYC administration 6. When the petting zoo spawns into monsters:
open dialogue and a venture's legitimacy quest in crowdfunding 7.
Generative imitation, strategic distancing and optimal distinctiveness
during the growth, decline and stabilization of Silicon Alley 8. A
double-edged sword: cultural entrepreneurship and the mobilisation of
morally tainted cultural resources 9. Venturing into the cultural future:
research opportunities at the nexus of institutions, innovation and impact