Decoding Organization: Bletchley Park, Codebreaking and Organization Studies
by Christopher Grey 2021-01-04 07:49:50
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How was Bletchley Park made as an organization? How was signals intelligence constructed as a field? What was Bletchley Park''s culture and how was its work co-ordinated? Bletchley Park was not just the home of geniuses such as Alan Turing, it was al... Read more
How was Bletchley Park made as an organization? How was signals intelligence constructed as a field? What was Bletchley Park''s culture and how was its work co-ordinated? Bletchley Park was not just the home of geniuses such as Alan Turing, it was also the workplace of thousands of other people, mostly women, and their organization was a key component in the cracking of Enigma. Challenging many popular perceptions, this book examines the hitherto unexamined complexities of how 10,000 people were brought together in complete secrecy during World War II to work on ciphers. Unlike most organizational studies, this book decodes, rather than encodes, the processes of organization and examines the structures, cultures and the work itself of Bletchley Park using archive and oral history sources. Organization theorists, intelligence historians and general readers alike will find in this book a challenge to their preconceptions of both Bletchley Park and organizational analysis. Less
  • File size
  • Print pages
  • Publisher
  • Publication date
  • Language
  • ISBN
  • 9.02 X 5.98 X 0.75 in
  • 342
  • Cambridge University Press
  • July 11, 2013
  • English
  • 9781107676756
Christopher Grey is from London, England. He has worked as a waiter, a hotel manager, a hospital porter, a jeans salesman, a rock musician, and a tour operator. This is his first book. Originally insp...
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