Trying Not to Try: The Paradox of Intentionality in Jazz Improvisation and its Implications for Organizational Scholarship

C. Fisher, Ozumcan Demir-Caliskan, M. Hua, M. Cronin
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Organizational scholars have long been interested in how jazz musicians manage tensions between structure and freedom, plans and action, and familiarity and novelty. Although improvisation has been conceptualized as a way of managing such paradoxes, the process of improvisation itself contains paradoxes. In this essay, we return to jazz improvisation to identify a new paradox of interest to organizational scholars: the paradox of intentionality. To improvise creatively, jazz musicians report that they must “try not to try,” or risk undermining the very spontaneity that is prized in jazz. Jazz improvisers must therefore control their ability to relinquish deliberate control of their actions. To accomplish this, they engage in three interdependent practices. Jazz musicians intentionally surrender their sense of active control (“letting go”) while creating a passive externalized role for this sense of active control (using a “third ear”). Letting go allows new and unexpected ideas to emerge, while the metaphorical third ear can identify promising ideas or problematic execution and, in doing so, re-engage active agency (“grabbing hold”). Examining the practices within creative improvisation reveals the complexity of the lived experience of the paradox, which we argue suggests further integration among organizational research on improvisation, creativity, and paradox.
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试图不去尝试:爵士乐即兴演奏中意向性的悖论及其对组织学术的启示
长期以来,组织学者一直对爵士音乐家如何处理结构与自由、计划与行动、熟悉与新奇之间的紧张关系感兴趣。虽然即兴创作已经被概念化为一种管理这些悖论的方式,但即兴创作的过程本身就包含着悖论。在这篇文章中,我们回到爵士乐即兴演奏,以确定组织学者感兴趣的一个新的悖论:意向性悖论。为了创造性地即兴创作,爵士音乐家们报告说,他们必须“尽量不去尝试”,否则就有可能破坏爵士乐中所珍视的自发性。因此,爵士乐即兴演奏者必须控制自己的能力,不要刻意控制自己的行为。为了实现这一目标,他们进行了三种相互依赖的实践。爵士音乐家故意放弃他们的主动控制感(“放手”),同时为这种主动控制感创造一个被动的外化角色(使用“第三只耳朵”)。放手可以让新的和意想不到的想法出现,而比喻的第三只耳朵可以识别有前途的想法或有问题的执行,并在此过程中重新投入积极的行动(“抓住”)。研究创造性即兴创作的实践揭示了悖论的生活经验的复杂性,我们认为这建议在即兴创作、创造力和悖论的组织研究之间进一步整合。
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