On Your Mind, Not in Your Face: Encouraging Heterodoxy with Subtle Ubiquity in Business and Management Schools
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Problem with BMS and the Turn to Critical Performativity
Subtly Reorganizing the Business School
‘It is a less spectacular, more understated and oblique strategic approach that appears to be more compatible with the attainment of longer-lasting success—one in which seemingly insignificant small gestures, which often go unnoticed, are recognized for the overall effect they eventually produce’.(Chia and Holt 2009, p. xi)
3. Performing Cultures with Subtlety
3.1. A Sticking Point
Perverting the language is the way the Left exercises its bogus moral superiority and controls the national discourse. This has been going on for decades, but has escalated alarmingly in recent years, as we have been told not just how to speak but how we must think.
3.2. Becoming Unstuck: Subtle Ubiquity as a Logic of [Anonymized Project]
4. Re-Organise Practice
5. Ubiquity Versus Diversity
6. Concluding Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Type of Word | ‘Sticky’ | ‘Spiky’ | ‘Slippery’ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Words that accumulate meanings to block movement between new words/objects and bind together other words/objects (cf. Ahmed 2004) | Words experienced negatively because the ideas they represent are consciously, if vaguely, rejected, but also because they are experienced as out-of-place and unusual. | Words that are stripped or almost devoid of meaning and can be interpreted as either ‘stick’ or ‘spiky’ depending on context. |
| Affective force | Positive | Negative | Vacillating (positive/negative affect, neutral) |
| Political effect | Reinforcing existing norms (stereotypes, social norms, codes of conduct and behaviour, prejudices) | Challenging existing social norms. | No effect or may reinforce and/or challenge existing social norms |
| Examples | Racialized or gendered slurs, terms of affection and nicknames, ‘us vs. them’ (as in nations), ‘family’, ‘marriage’, ‘community’, ‘business’, ‘market’ | ‘cooperative’ or ‘solidarity’ in an MBA class, ‘return on investment’ or ‘enterprise’ in a union representative meeting. | ‘culture’, ‘society’, ‘circular economy’, ‘donut economics’, ‘wellbeing’, ‘resilience’. |
| Approach | Teacher-Centred Critical Education | Freirean Critical Pedagogy | Subtle Ubiquity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Teaching that challenges the students existing worldview through the explanation of critical theories | Education that encourages dialectical dialogue between the educator and educand with the aim of developing an investigation to raise the educands’ awareness of their own oppression and their curiosity to tackle that oppression | A pedagogic tactic that deploys ‘sticky’, ‘spiky’ and ‘slippery’ words through repeated and dispersed exposure to gently open up students to alternatives ideas alongside existing ideas |
| Key methods | Didactics, systematic approach, ideological lessons, slogans, teacher-centred with occasional class interactions, threshold concepts are presented didactically | open-ended raising of views, possibility to debate and reject purpose of investigation, collection of data in the field, no imposition of theory or aggrandizing of a ‘teacher’ as purveyor of knowledge, raises centrality of indigenous knowledge and shares these with a wider academic audience, delivers socio-political change | The inclusion of ‘sticky’, ‘spiky’ and ‘slippery’ words in teaching to encourage alternative ideas (e.g., cooperatives, circular economy) alongside existing ideas (profit maximization, shareholder primacy) |
| Strengths | Compatible with programmes and modules demanding pre-existing learning aims and outcomes and large cohort sizes. | Capable of delivering social change beyond the classroom, respects indigenous knowledges | Compatible with programmes and modules demanding pre-existing learning aims and outcomes and large cohort sizes, can be mobilized by lectures lacking strong expertise in critical education and theories |
| Weaknesses | Poor student engagement, risks curtailing or removing student curiosity, disempowers students, does not encourage new thinking, moderately resource intensive to recruit lectures with relevant expertise | Not compatible with programmes and courses where looser delivery structures (e.g., no pre-defined learning aims and outcomes) and field work are not possible, challenging to deliver with larger cohort sizes, more resource intensive to implement | Risk of indoctrination if only a narrow set of ideas are chosen, can present difficulties if students expose a lack of knowledge from lectures |
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Wilson, M.; Sage, D.; Robinson, J.; Farmelo, S. On Your Mind, Not in Your Face: Encouraging Heterodoxy with Subtle Ubiquity in Business and Management Schools. Soc. Sci. 2026, 15, 303. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15050303
Wilson M, Sage D, Robinson J, Farmelo S. On Your Mind, Not in Your Face: Encouraging Heterodoxy with Subtle Ubiquity in Business and Management Schools. Social Sciences. 2026; 15(5):303. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15050303
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilson, Matthew, Daniel Sage, Jennifer Robinson, and Sean Farmelo. 2026. "On Your Mind, Not in Your Face: Encouraging Heterodoxy with Subtle Ubiquity in Business and Management Schools" Social Sciences 15, no. 5: 303. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15050303
APA StyleWilson, M., Sage, D., Robinson, J., & Farmelo, S. (2026). On Your Mind, Not in Your Face: Encouraging Heterodoxy with Subtle Ubiquity in Business and Management Schools. Social Sciences, 15(5), 303. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15050303

