Family firms as institutions: Cultural reproduction and status maintenance among multi-centenary shinise in Kyoto




Innan Sasaki, Davide Ravasi, Evelyn Rita Micelotta

PublisherSage

2019

 Organization Studies

40

6

39

0170-8406

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0170840618818596

https://doi.org/10.1177/0170840618818596



Our study investigated how multi-centenary family firms in the area of Kyoto – collectively known as shinise – maintain a high social status in the community. Our analysis unpacks the socio-cultural practices through which the ongoing interaction among these actors re-enacts and reproduces the social order that ascribes shinise
a distinct social standing in exchange for their continued commitment
to practices and structures that help the community preserve its cultural integrity and collective identity. By doing so, our findings trace a connection between status maintenance and the expressive function that a category of firms performs within a community. At the same time, our study reveals a dark side of high status, by showing how their commitments lock shinise in a position of ‘benign entrapment’ that may impose sacrifices on family members and severe limitations to their personal freedom.



Last updated on 26/11/2024 08:21:12 PM