1 / 19

Innovation Systems Research Network (ISRN) 7 th Annual Conference ( Graduate Student Session )

This paper examines the use of metaphors in ISRN documents to understand how they shape the conceptualization of clusters and their implications for research and policy development in Canada. The study identifies four prevalent metaphorical conceptions of clusters and discusses their interpretations and extensions.

bernard
Download Presentation

Innovation Systems Research Network (ISRN) 7 th Annual Conference ( Graduate Student Session )

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Innovation Systems Research Network (ISRN) 7th Annual Conference (Graduate Student Session) Understanding the ISRN conception of clusters: How metaphors both reveal & conceal Prepared by: Amanda Williams Doctoral Student Faculty of Communication and Culture University of Calgary

  2. The “Cluster Craze” • Today it is nearly impossible to escape the plethora of studies on clusters. • As the ISRN work illsustrates, Canada has not been immunune in trying to contribute to this growing body of work on clusters. • In reflexive spirit of work such as Malmberg & Maskell (2001) and Martin & Sunley (2003) this paper is an effort to start think critically about how clusters are being conceptualized discursively.

  3. Introduction: My Motivation... • This paper is inspired by an interest in how language in general, and metaphors in particular, help structure the direction of academic and policy discourse. • Keyresearch questions: how does the cluster metaphor function within ISRN documents; how do metaphors help to shape particular methodological and theoretical approaches to the study of clusters; and how might metaphorical constructions be modified to permit different spaces for future research and avenues of policy development in Canada? • Preliminary effort to try and think about metaphor as a useful tool for policy making.

  4. Theoretical Considerations:A Battle Over Definitions • Historical definitions (Aristotle & others) -Metaphors are ornamental, parasitic, deviant -This has in the words of Tilley (1999) “done considerable intellectual damage to the concept” Versus • Contemporary definitions, which come mostly from cognitive linguistics (Lakoff & Johnson, 1980) • “Understanding and experiencing one thing in terms of another” -Source (concrete), target (abstract), mappings -LOVE (target) AS A JOURNEY (concrete) -Mappings (travelers as lovers, vehicle as the love relationship, destination as the purpose of the relationship etc...)

  5. Contemporary Definition (Continued…) • “Metaphor is not a harmless exercise in naming. It is one of the principle means by which we understand our experience and reason on the basis of this understanding. To the extent that we act on our reasoning, metaphor plays a role in the creation of reality.” (Lakoff & Johnson, 1987)

  6. Theoretical Considerations:Why Use Metaphor? • Metaphors have real material consequences in the social world (ARGUMENT AS WAR versus ARGUMENT AS DANCE) • Tilley (1999) suggests we use metaphor for three distinct reasons: 1) Provides a way of giving form to ideas that cannot be expressed in literal words (tacit to codified knowledge); 2) Allows us to put complex ideas in to fewer words; and, 3) Are a vivid tool to help capture people’s imaginations.

  7. Theoretical Considerations: The Challenges of Using Metaphor • Always mask some components of the social world “only partial view never total” (Lakoff & Johnson, 1980); • Involves directing intentions (Latour, 1999); and • Can be used, abused, and contested (Tilley, 1999).

  8. Theoretical Considerations: Literature Review • Interest in metaphor is on the rise. • Studies in archaeology and anthropology, communications, education, health,information technology, innovation and knowledge creation (Nonaka & Takeuchi, 1995), law, management and political science. • Collectively this work provides a convincing and engaging account of how metaphors function to guide both thinking and actions.

  9. Methodology: Guidelines to Metaphor Analysis • Core steps: identify metaphor; explore how metaphor works & its implications; reflect upon why metaphor was used; and consider some alternatives. • Key question: how do metaphors function in ISRN texts?

  10. Methodology: Data Selected • Public face of ISRN findings. • Recognize that data is limited because it does not look at the specific case studies.

  11. Research Results:ISRN Metaphors • The ISRN project uses Porter’s (1998) definition of a cluster, which is a geographic concentration “of interconnected companies and institutions in a particular field” to help clarify what is meant by the term cluster. • Detailed analysis of thelanguage within the ISRN documents also indicates that there are at least four prevalent metaphorical conceptions of clusters.

  12. Research Results: CLUSTER AS A PERSON • Generally positive;looks at life-cycles;not just a snapshot in time.

  13. Research Results:CLUSTER AS A PLANT • Should the focus be on how firms or regions can replicate the cluster phenomenon? How useful are best practices?

  14. Research Results:CLUSTER AS A FORCE • Interesting metaphor because force it still a relatively abstract source domain.

  15. Research Results: CLUSTER AS AN ASSOCIATION or AN “ELITE GROUP” • Suggests membership has its advantages; is firm focused; bounded entity to an imaginary phenomenon.

  16. Research Results: Interpretations • How might we extend these metaphors: person (how does life-cycle link to local, regional, national fitness landscape?); plant (if not replication what generalizations can be made?); force (what do they repel as well as attract?); and association (should the analytic focus be primarily on firms?). • Most metaphors focused on highly positive attributes but what about the negative components such as local congestion, environmental pressures, labor cost inflation, institutional lock-ins, widening income disparities and over specialization.

  17. Research Results: Interpretations (Continued…) • Could also consider alternative metaphors to a cluster (new industrial spaces, regional innovations milieus). • Need to question why we use cluster metaphors at all; what do we have trouble describing about clusters in literal language? • In final phase of research dissemination the ISRN is in an ideal position to think about the utility of this metaphor;do they limit the scope of the discourse; and how might these metaphors be redirected?

  18. Concluding Thoughts:Areas for Future Research • Tool for better understanding knowledge creation process (Nonaka & Takeuchi’s, 1995, knowledge spiral) and policy-making. • Understanding how members of the cluster actually use the cluster metaphor(s) (e.g. entrepreneurs, universities and firms). • Questioning the development of the academic discourse itself over time. • Exploring popular discourses on clusters and innovation.

  19. Questions/feedback • What do you think about this approach? • Is it useful? • Additional thoughts and,or, questions…

More Related