Ask a person on the street whether new technologies bring about important social change and you are likely to hear a resounding yes. But the answer is less definitive amongst academics who study technology and social practice. Scholarly writing has been heavily influenced by the ideology of technological determinism - the belief that some types or technologically driven social changes are inevitable and cannot be stopped. Rather than argue for or against notions of determinism the authors in this book ask how the materiality (the arrangement of physical digital or rhetorical materials into particular forms that endure across differences in place and time) of technologies ranging from computer-simulation tools and social media to ranking devices and rumours is actually implicated in the process of formal and informal organizing. The book builds a new theoretical framework to consider the important socio-technical changes confronting people''s everyday experiences in and outside of work. Leading scholars in the field contribute original chapters examining the complex interactions between technology and the social between artefact and humans. The discussion spans multiple disciplines including management information systems informatics communication sociology and the history of technology and opens up a new area of research regarding the relationship between materiality and organizing.
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