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Chinese wisdom, management practices and the humanities

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Purpose ‐ This article aims at showing that the relationship between Chinese classical wisdoms and managerial practices should not be reduced to the establishment of an "art of war" applicable to management practices, but should rather be understood as an ever-evolving work of critical reinterpretation, so as to liberate the creative and strategic potential that this tradition embodies. Design/methodology/approach ‐ It does so by critically deconstructing the question of the "relevance" of Chinese wisdom for managerial practices, by assessing the way contemporary Sinology understands and interprets the concept of "Chinese wisdom", and by designing a strategy for applying these insights to managerial education. Findings ‐ It thus shows that only historical contextualization and textual studies can ground an understanding of Chinese tradition applicable to managerial education. Practical implications ‐ By doing so, it helps educators to re-anchor managerial education into the field and methodologies of humanities studies. Originality/value ‐ It thus goes against the utilitarian and over-simplified syntheses of Chinese thought that are currently dominant in the managerial literature about China, and proposes new ways for making the study of China a channel through which to develop in our students a sense of relativity, complexity and empathy applicable to an array of cultural contexts.

Keywords: China; Chinese tradition; Humanities; Interpretation; Local cultures; Storytelling; Sustainable development; Utopianism

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 19 July 2011

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