Decolonizando business history: o caso da historiografia Unilever

Conteúdo do artigo principal

Alexandre Faria
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9095-725X
Jaeder F. Cunha
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3254-2544

Resumo

A ascensão da direita radical no contexto do capitalismo neoliberal numa era de descolonização e império vem sendo impulsionada por revisionismos historiográficos que informam a radicalização em escala global da colonialidade Norte-Sul negada pela história. Nesse contexto investigamos a negação da América Latina pela historiografia da Unilever (HU) co-produzida pela área de business history (BH). O objetivo é investigar a negação da América Latina na HU e buscar a superação desse quadro em BH por meio de uma abordagem decolonial transmoderna engajada com a maioria vivendo “histórias outras” que promovem um diálogo Sul-Norte inovador entre as viradas históricas euro-britânica e decolonial da América Latina em estudos organizacionais e da gestão (EOG). Como metodologia desenvolvemos uma perspectiva decolonial práxica de investigação historiográfica visando ir além do padrão de pluralidade conformista no Norte, rumo à transmodernidade libertadora no Sul e no Norte. A investigação sugere que a HU incorpora um padrão ambivalente de historicização que é ignorado por ambas as viradas históricas. Argumentamos que a institucionalização do campo de BH pelo mundo anglo-americano como uma virada pós-imperial é informada por dinâmicas inter-imperiais e radicalização do binarismo Norte-Sul protagonizadas pela área de imperial history. Com implicações para pesquisa e ensino em BH e EOG, concluímos que diálogos transmodernos engajados com crescente população vivendo presentes coloniais-imperiais permitem a renovação de lutas decoloniais solidárias no Sul e no Norte contra dinâmicas inter-imperiais de negação e apropriação-contenção de “histórias outras” vividas também por acadêmicos.

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Métricas

Carregando Métricas ...

Detalhes do artigo

Como Citar
Faria, A., & Cunha, J. F. (2022). Decolonizando business history: o caso da historiografia Unilever. Cadernos EBAPE.BR, 20(1), 118–134. https://doi.org/10.1590/1679-395120210001
Seção
Artigos

Referências

Allardyce, G. (1990). Toward world history: American historians and the coming of the world history course. Journal of World History, 1(1), 23-76.

Allen, R. (2001). The globalization of white supremacy: toward a critical discourse on the racialization of the world. Educational Theory, 51(4), 467.

Amin, S. (2010). Global history: a view from the South. Fahamu, Africa: Pambazuka Press.

Andrews, K. (2021). The new age of empire: how racism and colonialism still rule the world. New York, NY: Bold Type Books.

Ankersmit, F. (2001, março). Historiografia e pós-modernismo. Topoi, 61, 113-135.

Anzaldúa, G. (2015). Borderlands/La frontera: the new mestiza (5a ed.). San Francisco, CA: Aunte Lute Books.

Barker, J. (2015). The corporation and the tribe. American Indian Quarterly, 39(3), 243-270.

Barnet, R., & Cavanagh, J. (1995). Global dreams: imperial corporations and the new world order. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster.

Barros, A., & Carrieri, A. (2013). Ensino superior em Administração entre os anos 1940 e 1950: uma discussão a partir dos acordos de cooperação Brasil-Estados Unidos. Cadernos EBAPE.BR, 11(2), 256-273.

Berg, M. (2013). Writing the History of the Global. Oxford, UK: Oxford University.

Bergquist, C. (1990). In the name of history: a disciplinary critique of Orlando fals bordas historia doble de la Costa. Latin American Research Review, 25(3), 156-176.

Bhabha, H. (2014). The Location of Culture. London, UK: Routledge.

Booth, C., & Rowlinson, M. (2006). Management and organizational history: prospects. Management & Organizational History, 1(1), 5-30.

Braudel, F. (1949). La Méditerranée et le monde méditerranéen a l’époque de Philippe II. Paris, France: Armand Colin.

Braudel, F. (1985). La Dynamique du Capitalisme. Paris, France: Flammarion.

Brewer, T. (1993). FDI in emerging market countries. In L. Oxelheim (Org.), The global race for FDI. Prospects for the future. Berlin, Germany: Springer-Verlag.

Burnham, J. (1941). The managerial revolution: what is happening in the world. New York, NY: John Day.

Chakrabarty, D. (2000). Provincializing Europe: postcolonial thought and historical difference. New Jersey, NJ: Princeton University.

Chandler, A. (1959). The beginnings of ‘big business’ in American industry. Business History Review, 33(1), 1-31.

Chandler, A. (1962). strategy and structure: chapters in the history of the American industrial enterprise. Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Chandler, A., & Mazlish, B. (2005). Leviathans: multinational corporations and the new global history. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University.

Clark, P., & Rowlinson, M. (2004). Management and organizational history: prospects. Business History, 46(3), 331-352.

Contu, A. (2018). ‘… The point is to change it’–Yes, but in what direction and how? Intellectual activism as a way of ‘walking the talk’ of critical work in business schools. Organization, 25(2), 282-293.

Cooke, B. (2004). The managing of the (third) world. Organization, 11(5), 603-629.

Cooke, B., & Alcadipani, R. (2015). Toward a global history of management education: the case of the Ford Foundation and the São Paulo School of Business Administration, Brazil. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 14(4), 482-499.

Cooke, B., & Faria, A. (2013). Development, management and north Atlantic imperialism: for Eduardo Ibarra-Colado. Cadernos EBAPE.BR, 11(2), 1-15.

Cusicanqui, S. (2018). Un mundo ch’ixi es posible. Ensayos desde un presente en crisis. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Tinta Limón.

D’Ávila, C. (2008). A special issue on business in Latin America. The Business History Review, 82(3), 439-444.

D’Ávila, C., & Miller, R. (Orgs.) (1999). Business history in Latin America: the experience in seven countries. Liverpool, UK: Liverpool University.

Dar, S., Liu, H., Martinez Dy, A., & Brewis, D. (2020). The business school is racist: act up! Organization, 28(4), 695-706.

Darwin, J. (1988). Britain and decolonisation: the retreat from empire in the post-war world. New York, NY: Macmillan International Higher Education.

Decker, S., Kipping, M., & Wadhwani, R. (2015). New business histories! Plurality in business history research methods. Business History, 57(1), 30-40.

Dosman, E. (2011). Raúl Prebisch (1901-1986): a construção da América Latina e do terceiro mundo. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Contraponto.

Duffield, M. (2005). Getting savages to fight barbarians: development, security and the colonial present: analysis. Conflict, Security & Development, 5(2), 141-159.

Dunning, J. (1973). The determinants of international production. Oxford Economic Papers, 25, 289-325.

Durand, J. (2008). Formação do campo publicitário brasileiro 1930-1970 (Relatório de Pesquisa GV Pesquisa, n. 10). São Paulo, SP: FGV EAESP.

Durepos, G., Maclean, M., Alcadipani, R., & Cummings, S. (2020). Historical reflections at the intersection of past and future: celebrating 50 years of management learning. Management Learning, 51(1), 3-16.

Durepos, G., & Mills, A. (2017). ANTi-History, relationalism and the historic turn in management and organization Studies. Management and Organization Studies, 12(1), 53-67.

Dussel, E. (1973). América Latina: dependencia y liberación. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Fernando García Cambeiro.

Dussel, E. (1993). 1492. O encobrimento do outro: a origem do mito da modernidade. Petrópolis, RJ: Vozes.

Dussel, E. (1999). Ética de la liberación en la edad de la globalización y de la exclusión (Vol. 2). Madrid, España: Trotta.

Dussel, E. (2008). Philosophy of liberation, the postmodern debate, and Latin American studies. In M. Moraña, E. Dussel, & C. A. Jáuregui (Eds.), Coloniality at large: Latin America and the postcolonial debate (pp. 335-349). Durham, North Carolina: Duke University.

Dussel, E. (2011). O século XXI: nova idade na história da filosofia enquanto diálogo mundial entre tradições filosóficas. Filosofazer, 39, 9-28.

Dussel, E. (2014). 16 Tesis de Economía Política: Interpretación filosófica. Ciudad de México, MX: Siglo XX1.

Dussel, E. (2016). Transmodernidade e interculturalidade: interpretação a partir da filosofia da libertação. Revista Sociedade e Estado, 31(1), 51-73.

Erro, C. (2003). Historia Empresarial. Pasado, presente y rotas de futuro. Barcelona, España: Ariel.

Escobar, A. (1988). Power and visibility: development and the invention and management of the third world. Cultural Anthropology, 3(4), 428-443.

Escobar, A. (2007). Worlds and knowledges otherwise: the Latin American modernity/coloniality research program. Cultural studies, 21(2-3), 179-210.

Fanon, F. (1967). Black skin, white masks. New York, NY: Grove.

Faria, A. (2013). Border thinking in action: should critical management studies get anything done? In David Allen (Ed.), Getting things done. Bingley, UK: Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

Faria, A., & Hemais, M. (2020). Transmodernizing management historiographies of consumerism for the majority. Journal of Business Ethics, 1-19.

Fieldhouse, D. (1978). Unilever overseas: the anatomy of a multinational (1895-1965). London, UK: Croom Helm.

Fieldhouse, D. (1984). Economics and empire 1830-1914 (2a ed.). London, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Forjaz, M. (2008). História Empresarial como área de pesquisa (Relatório 14/2008). São Paulo, SP: FGV EAESP.

Fotaki, M., & Prasad, A. (2015). Questioning Neoliberal Capitalism and economic inequality in business schools. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 14(4), 556-575.

Frank, A. G. (1967). Capitalism and underdevelopment in Latin America. New York, NY: NYU Press.

Friedman, W., & Jones, G. (2011). Business history: time for debate. Business History Review, 85(1), 4-19.

Galambos, L. (1970). The emerging organizational synthesis in modern American history. Business History Review, 44(3), 279-290.

Geyer, M., & Bright, C. (1995). World history in a global age. American Historical Review, 100(4), 1034-1060.

Gopal, P. (2019). Insurgent empire: anticolonial resistance and British dissent. London, UK: Verso Books.

Grandin, G. (2011). The last colonial massacre: Latin America in the cold war (2a ed.). Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago.

Grosfoguel, R. (1996). From Cepalismo to neoliberalism: A world-systems approach to conceptual shifts in Latin America. Review, 19(2), 131-154.

Grosfoguel, R. (2020). Epistemic Extractivism. In B. Santos, & M. P. Meneses (Eds.), Knowledges born in the struggle: Constructing the epistemologies of the global south. London, UK: Routledge.

Guevara, C. (1996). Empresas e história em América Latina. Um balance historiográfico. Bogotá, Colombia: TM Editores.

Habermas, J. (1987). The theory of communicative action (Vol. I and Vol. II). Boston, MA: Beacon Press.

Harvey, D. (2007). O Neoliberalismo: história e implicações. São Paulo, SP: Loyola.

Howe, S. (1998). David Fieldhouse and “Imperialism”: some historiographical revisions. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 26(2), 213-232.

Hunter, W., & Power, T. (2019). Bolsonaro and Brazil’s illiberal backlash. Journal of Democracy, 30(1), 68-82.

Huntington, S. (1996). The clash of civilizations and the remaking of world order. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster.

Hymer, S. (1978). Empresas multinacionais: a internacionalização do capital. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Edições Graal.

Ibarra-Colado, E. (2006). Organization Studies and Epistemic Coloniality in Latin America: Thinking Otherness from the Margins. Organization, 13(4), 489-508.

Jammulamadaka, N., Faria, A., Jack, G., & Ruggunan, S. (2021). Decolonising management and organisational knowledge (MOK): Praxistical theorising for potential worlds. Organization, 28(5), 717-740.

Jenkins, K. (1991). Rethinking History. London, UK: Routledge.

Jones, G. (2005). Renewing Unilever. Transformation and Tradition. New York, NY: Oxford University.

Jones, S. (1996). Business imperialism and business history. South African Journal of Economic History, 1(1), 1-20.

Kaplan, J. (2003). The birth of the white corporation. By What Authority, 5(2), 12-21.

Kennedy, D. (2015). The imperial history wars. Journal of British Studies, 54, 5-22.

Kennedy, D. (2018). The imperial history wars: debating the British empire. London, UK: Bloomsbury.

Kilcullen, D. (2006). Counter-insurgency redux. Survival, 48(4), 111-130.

Konings, P. (1998). Unilever, contract farmers and co‐operatives in Cameroon: crisis and response. Journal of Peasant Studies, 26(1), 112-138.

Laird, P. (2016). How business historians can save the world – from the fallacy of self-made success. Business History, 59(8), 1-17.

MacKenzie, J. (1984), Propaganda and Empire: The Manipulation of British Public Opinion, 1880-1960. Manchester, UK: Manchester University.

Maclean, M., Harvey, C., & Clegg, S. (2017). Organization theory in business and management history: Present status and future prospects. Business History Review, 91(3), 457-481.

Maldonado-Torres, N. (2008). Against war. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press.

Maldonado-Torres, N. (2011). Thinking through the Decolonial Turn. Trans Modernity: Journal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso-Hispanic World, 1(2), 1-16.

Maldonado-Torres, N. (2020). El Caribe, la colonialidad, y el giro decolonial. Latin American Research Review, 55(3), 560-573.

Marable, M., & Hinton, E. (2011). The new black history: Revisiting the Second Reconstruction. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.

Mazlish, B. (1998). Comparing global history to world history. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 28(3), 385-395.

McClintock, A. (1995). Imperial leather: race, gender, and sexuality in the colonial contest. London, UK: Routledge.

McEwan, C. (2019). Postcolonialism, decoloniality and development. London, UK: Routledge.

McLean, J. (2004). The transnational corporation in history: lessons for today. Industrial Law Journal, 79, 363-382.

McNeill, W. (1998). The changing shape of world history. History and theory, 34(2), 8-26.

Mendes, J. (2010). História empresarial: da monografia apologética ao instrumento de gestão estratégica. In M. Ribeiro (Ed.), Outros combates pela história (pp. 279-295). Coimbra, Portugal: Coimbra Press.

Mignolo, W. (2003). Globalization and the geopolitics of knowledge: The role of the humanities in the corporate university. Nepantla: Views from South, 4(1), 97-119.

Mignolo, W. D. (2005). The idea of latin America. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers.

Mignolo, W. (2007). Delinking: the rhetoric of modernity, the logic of coloniality and the grammar of de-coloniality. Cultural Studies, 21(2-3), 449-514.

Mignolo, W. (2009). Epistemic disobedience, independent thought and de-colonial freedom. Theory, Culture & Society, 26(7-8), 1-23.

Mignolo, W. (2011). the darker side of western modernity: global futures, decolonial options. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University.

Mignolo, W. (2020). The logic of the in-visible: decolonial reflections on the change of epoch. Theory, Culture & Society, 37(7-8), 205-218.

Mignolo, W. D., & Walsh, C. E. (2018). On decoloniality. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press.

Miller, R. (2008). A century of banking in Latin America: to commemorate the centenary in 1962 of the bank of London & South America limited. By David Joslin. Business History Review, 82(3), 608-611.

Mills, A., Suddaby, R., Foster, W., & Durepos, G. (2016). “Re-visiting the historic turn 10 years later: current debates in management and organizational history – an introduction”. In P. McLaren, A. Mills, & T. Weatherbee (Orgs.), The Routledge companion to management and organizational history. London, UK: Routledge.

Mills, C. (2017). Black Rights / White Wrongs. Oxford, UK: Oxford University.

Misoczky, M. (2011). World visions in dispute in contemporary Latin America: development x harmonic life. Organization, 18(3), 345-363.

Mockaitis, T. (1995). British counterinsurgency in the post-imperial era. Manchester, UK: Manchester University.

Moraga, C., & Anzaldúa, G. (2015). This bridge called my back: writings by radical women of color. New York, NY: Suny Press.

Munslow, A. (2012). The history of history. New York, NY: Routledge.

Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S. (2015). Decoloniality as the future of Africa. History Compass, 13(10), 485-496.

Nkomo, S. (2018). “Reflection on Africapitalism and Management Education in Africa”. In K. Amaeshi, A. Okupe, & U. Idemudia (Orgs.), Africapitalism: rethinking the role of business in Africa (pp. 261-281). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University.

Palma, G. (1978). Dependency: a formal theory of underdevelopment or a methodology for the analysis of concrete situations of underdevelopment? World Development, 6(7-8), 881-924.

Panitch, L., & Gindin, S. (2017). The Making of global capitalism: the political economy of America Empire. London, UK: Verso.

Pelaez, V. (2008). Contribuição de Tamás Szmrecsányi à historiografia de empresas. História Econômica & História de Empresas, 11(2), 79-90.

Penrose, E. (1959). The Theory of the Growth of the Firm. York, NY: Wiley.

Pérez, E. (1999). The decolonial imaginary: writing Chicanas into history. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.

Pitts, J. (2009). A turn to empire: the rise of imperial liberalism in Britain and France. New Jersey, NJ: Princeton University.

Popp, A., & Fellman, S. (2017). Writing business history: creating narratives. Business History, 59(8), 1242-1260.

Pradella, L., & Marois, T. (2015). Polarizing development: Alternatives to neoliberalism and the crisis. London, UK: Pluto.

Quijano, A. (1995). Modernity, identity, and utopia in Latin America. Boundary, 20(3), 14-155.

Quijano, A. (2000). Modernidad, Colonialidad y América Latina. Neplanta, 1(3), 533-80.

Rawls, J. (2014). A Lei dos povos: e a ideia de razão pública revisitada. Lisboa, Portugal: Edições 70.

Ribeiro, D. (2018). Quem tem medo do feminismo negro? Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Companhia das Letras.

Ricoeur, P. (2007). A memória, a história, o esquecimento. Campinas, SP: Unicamp.

Rodney, W. (1973). How Europe underdeveloped Africa. Tanzania, Dodoma: Bogle-L’Ouverture Publications.

Rodrigues, A. (2002). MPM Propaganda: a história da agência dos anos de ouro da publicidade brasileira (Dissertação de Mestrado). Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, RS.

Rooks, N. (2006). White money/Black power: the surprising history of African American studies and the crisis of race in higher education. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.

Rostow, W. W. (1960). The Stages of economic growth: a non-communist manifesto. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University.

Rushkoff, D. (2009). Life Inc.: how the world became a corporation and how to take it back. New York, NY: Random House.

Sandoval, C. (2000). Methodology of the Oppressed. Minnesota, Twin Cities: University of Minnesota.

Santos, B. (2018). The end of the cognitive empire: the coming of age of epistemologies of the south. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University.

Santos, B., & Meneses, M. (2020). Knowledges Born in the Struggle. London, UK: Routledge.

Scott, W., & Hart, D. (1991). The exhaustion of managerialism. Society, 28(3), 39-48.

Suddaby, R. (2016). Toward a historical consciousness: following the historic turn in management thought. M@n@gement, 19(1), 46-60.

Sunkel, O. (1972). Big business and “Dependencia”. Foreign Affairs, 50, 517-531.

Toms, S., & Wilson, J. (2017). “Business history: agendas, historiography and debates”. In J.Wilson, S. Toms, A. Jong, & E. Buchnea (Orgs.), The Routledge companion to business history (pp. 9-18). Oxon, UK: Routledge.

Udofia, O. (1984). Imperialism in Africa: a case of multinational corporations. Journal of Black Studies, 14(3), 353-368.

Unilever. (2018). Unilever annual report and accounts. Recuperado de http://www.annualreports.com/Company/unilever-plc

Van de Lent, W., & Durepos, G. (2019). Nurturing the historic turn: “history as theory” versus “history as method”. Journal of Management History, 25(4): 429–443.

Wallerstein, I. (1974). The modern world-system. New York, NY: Academic Press.

Wanderley, S., & Barros, A. (2019). Decoloniality, geopolitics of knowledge and historic turn: towards a Latin American agenda. Management & Organizational History, 14(1), 79-97.

Wanderley, S., & Faria, A. (2012). The Chandler–Furtado case: A de-colonial re-framing of a North/South (dis) encounter. Management & Organizational History, 7(3), 219-236.

Wasserman, C. (2017). A Teoria da Dependência: do nacional-desenvolvimentism ao neoliberalism. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: FGV.

White, H. (1986). Historical pluralism. Critical Inquiry, 12(3), 480-493.

Whittington, R., & Mayer, M. (2005). The European corporation: strategy, structure and social science. Oxford, UK: Oxford University.

Wilkins, M. (1980). Reviewed work: “Unilever overseas: the anatomy of a multinational 1895-1965”. Business History Review, 54(3), 420-422.

Wilson, C. (1954). The history of Unilever. a study in economic growth and social change (2 Vols.). London, UK: Cassell.

Wilson, C. (1968). Unilever 1945-1968. London, UK: Cassell.