Habits, Infinite Jest and the recoveries of pragmatism

Behaviourists treat habits as thoughtlessly undertaken actions. Pragmatists, by contrast, emphasise the role intelligence plays in habit's cultivation. Although organisational analysts have tended to prefer behavioural approaches to habit, pragmatism has been recently resurgent. This paper anal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Culture and organization 2023-03, Vol.29 (2), p.111-123
Hauptverfasser: Dunne, Stephen, Pedersen, Michael
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description Behaviourists treat habits as thoughtlessly undertaken actions. Pragmatists, by contrast, emphasise the role intelligence plays in habit's cultivation. Although organisational analysts have tended to prefer behavioural approaches to habit, pragmatism has been recently resurgent. This paper analyses how David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest dramatises this hermeneutical dichotomy. The novel, we demonstrate, represents the difference between terminal decline and lasting sobriety by opposing the fates of two characters: the suffering addict (Randy Lenz) is characterised mechanistically whereas the recovering addict (Don Gately) is characterised experientially. Infinite Jest's fictionalisation of addiction and recovery, we claim, emphasises the saving power of pragmatism. Wallace's novel can therefore be read as another contribution towards the ongoing recovery of pragmatism both within and beyond organisation studies.
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subjects Addictions
Behavior
behaviourism
Cultivation
David Foster Wallace
Exegesis & hermeneutics
Habit
Habits
Intelligence
literary theory
Pragmatism
Recovery
Sobriety
title Habits, Infinite Jest and the recoveries of pragmatism
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