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Bureaucracy: A Love Story
(2018)
  • Gabriel Cervantes, University of North Texas
  • Dahlia Porter, University of North Texas
  • Ryan Skinnell
  • Kelly Wisecup, University of North Texas
Abstract
Bureaucracy usually only becomes visible when it stops working—when a system fails, when an event gets off schedule, when someone points to a problem or glitch in a carefully calibrated workflow. But Bureaucracy: A Love Story draws together research done by scholars and students in the Special Collections at the University of North Texas to illuminate how bureaucracy structures our contemporary lives across a range of domains. People have navigated bureaucracy for centuries, by creating and utilizing various literary and rhetorical forms—from indexes to alphabetization to diagrams to blanks—that made it possible to efficiently process large amounts of information. Contemporary bureaucracy is likewise concerned with how to collect and store information, to circulate it efficiently, and to allow for easy access. We are interested both in the conventional definition of bureaucracy as a form of ordering and control connected to institutions and the state, but we also want to uncover how people interacted—often in creative ways—with the material forms of bureaucracy.
Keywords
  • Bureaucracy,
  • Materiality,
  • Rhetoric,
  • Literature,
  • History,
  • Sociology
Disciplines
Publication Date
March 1, 2018
Publisher
Aquiline Books
ISBN
978-1-68040-031-1
Citation Information
Gabriel Cervantes, Dahlia Porter, Ryan Skinnell and Kelly Wisecup. Bureaucracy: A Love Story. Denton, TX(2018)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ryan_skinnell/25/