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Knowing, Power and Materiality: A Critical Review and Reconceptualization of Absorptive Capacity
Author(s) -
Marabelli Marco,
Newell Sue
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of management reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.475
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1468-2370
pISSN - 1460-8545
DOI - 10.1111/ijmr.12031
Subject(s) - possession (linguistics) , construct (python library) , epistemology , absorptive capacity , materiality (auditing) , sociology , interpretation (philosophy) , power (physics) , epistemology of wikipedia , knowledge creation , psychology , knowledge management , social epistemology , computer science , philosophy , aesthetics , operations management , linguistics , economics , physics , quantum mechanics , downstream (manufacturing) , programming language
Most studies on absorptive capacity ( AC ) are based on assumptions that are characteristic of viewing knowledge from an epistemology of possession (knowledge is possessed by individuals and is transferrable). However, the literature on managing knowledge (or better knowledge work) acknowledges also an epistemology of practice (knowledge is unpredictable and dynamic and constituted in and through practice). Moreover, the literature on AC is relatively silent on the relationship between knowledge and power. In this paper, the authors argue that the AC construct should be interpreted in light of the possession and the practice perspectives of knowledge and power. The analysis includes a systematic literature review of AC that supports the authors' claims and, based on this, they suggest an interpretation of the construct that takes into account knowledge–power relationships. This review and theorizing contribute to a richer and processual view of AC .