‘Ella says it’s the secret to the universe’: How eponymic claims ventriloquially constitute relational authority Journal Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Contributing to the ‘relational turn’ within organization and management studies, we deepen authority studies’ handling of relationality by utilizing a communication as constitutive of organization lens to advance a novel understanding of authority’s simultaneously enduring <i>and</i> fleeting nature. We introduce the concept of eponymic claims to shift relational readings of authority from questions of presence <i>or</i> absence to those of ventriloquial <i>weight</i>. Our theorizing derives from an ethnography of an eponymous cosmetics firm. Blending multiple field materials, we show how arrangements of human and other-than-human figures ventriloquially <i>lend weight</i> to makeup artists’ situated authority moves, <i>and</i> carry an organizational <i>weight of expectation</i>, at times resembling a <i>deadweight</i> for them. Developing ventriloquial conceptions of weight helps to show relational authority to be both a momentary <i>and</i> a deeply organizational accomplishment, with the traces of eponymic claims’ authoritative and disorienting effects traversing into organizational, client, and social spheres. Finally, the concept of eponymic claims helps to elevate eponymy from something that is largely hidden in plain sight to a powerful organizing force.

publication date

  • August 10, 2025

Date in CU Experts

  • August 20, 2025 6:53 AM

Full Author List

  • Hollis D; Wright A; Kuhn T

author count

  • 3

Other Profiles

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0170-8406

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1741-3044

Additional Document Info

number

  • 01708406251370505