02317nam a22001697a 4500999001900000008004100019100006200060245009300122260001800215300003200233520160800265650011601873773001701989906002702006942000702033952010702040 c528018d528018241104b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aKaya, Didem Derya Özdemir and Fotaki, Marianna 959254 aGrounding in the unconscious: “The field” in psychosocial organizational ethnography aOrganization  a31(6), Sep, 2024: p.929-951 aPsychosocial research, which explores the unconscious and affective dynamics of organizational and social phenomena from critical perspectives, often adopts ethnographic methods. However, its locus, the unconscious, has an obscure, diffuse and dynamic nature that calls into question two central assumptions of conventional organizational ethnography: that an organization is a self-contained physical (research) site, and ethnographic research is best led by participant observation. The unconscious is produced by countless agents dispersed across time and space, making it impossible to readily identify a research site. Furthermore, psychosocial phenomena cannot be physically demarcated because a multitude of discourses, imagery, psyches, bodies, and objects are enmeshed in them. These raise contentious ontological, epistemological, and methodological questions for psychosocial researchers. In this article, we ruminate on “the field” in psychosocial organizational ethnography, seeking a robust epistemological and methodological approach to constructing and dwelling in an unconscious research site. Drawing on Lacanian psychoanalysis, we present a conceptual discussion of these issues and translate them into ethnographic methods illustrated by examples from the authors’ research. By critically re-evaluating the question of “the field,” we contribute to ethnographic studies of organizational phenomena with “fuzzy fields” without self-evident boundaries that draw on diverse onto-epistemologies. Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/13505084221148640  aFuzzy fields, “Lacan, Organizational ethnography, Psychosocial ethnography, The field, the unconscious948518 aOrganization aPSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH cAR 00102ddc40709403097aIIPAbIIPAd2024-11-04h31(6), Sep, 2024: p.929-951pAR133446r2024-11-04yAR