Looking like an Administration: Towards an Aesthetics of Bureaucracy
Online veröffentlicht: 09. Juli 2025
Seitenbereich: 3 - 11
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/adhi-2023-0017
Schlüsselwörter
© 2023 Jonathan Foster et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
In recent decades, research has begun to explore the aesthetic and cultural dimensions of public administration. Before this, however, these dimensions had hardly been discussed. From the historical establishment of modern bureaucracies to their reflection by organisational theory in the twentieth century, administrations were perceived in other registers. When, in the mid-eighteenth century, the physiocrat Vincent de Gournay coined the term »bureaucracy«, his intention was to characterise what he viewed as a new form of rule: that of the legion of clerks employed by Louis XV in the course of his administrative reform.(1) Gournay’s new term was essentially a pun: »To the classic three regimes, democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy— that is, rule by the many, the few, and the one—Gournay had added rule by a piece of office furniture.«(2) French administrative power had passed from the colourful and prestigious Versailles to small and gloomy parlours and from the stage of courtly events to anonymous and subaltern administrative officials—and yet, at the same time, the process of »bureaucratisation« had also sparked a creative impulse and generated an image of administrative power with meme-like intensity.
A century after de Gournay, the German statesman and political scientist Robert von Mohl, himself also a liberal, described bureaucracy as an »inexpedient formality«, a »waste of ink« and ultimately as »completely superfluous« or »formally pointless paperwork«, which must ultimately lead to the »certain death of every ingenious thought«. For him, bureaucratic »paper controls« threatened to divest public life of its colourful diversity.(3) Even in Max Weber’s classic theorisation of bureaucracy, which places the administrative
What has been attributed to administrative institutions since the 18th century is, in essence, mediocrity and tediousness, futility and superfluousness, dryness and stupidity, as well as a lack of character verging on inhumanity. For this reason, the very concept of »administrative aesthetics« (Eugenie Samier)(7) or of an »aesthetics of administration« (Benjamin Buchloch)(8) –– the subject that we have set out to explore in this special issue––presents itself as a bit of an impossibility, an oxymoron, a contradiction in terms. And yet, states have kept the most diverse artists and writers busy. From early modern portraitists and commissioned painters to photographers and filmmakers, from Honoré de Balzac to Franz Kafka and David Foster Wallace, bureaucracy has not only been dealt with under the auspices of alienation and criticism of power, but also with intense interest and a certain contrarian fascination. It is precisely because of its supposed dullness and stupidity that bureaucracy has posed a specifically aesthetic challenge, with writers and artists exploring quandaries such as »how to make administrative systems interesting to a reader, how to embody abstract public values, and how to make an absence of individualism seem heroic.«(9) Alongside artistic explorations of the good in public service, literary and artistic renditions have highlighted how administrative routine can turn into the grotesque and the ridiculous.(10) Questions have also been raised as to whether the actual operational secrets of the modern state are not hidden behind the appearance of the superfluous in administrative statecraft. Historians, portraitists and narrators of administration have likewise been sensitive to the acute risk of the programmatic discipline, obedience and ›inhumanity‹ of bureaucrats developing into a veritable ›iron cage‹ of bureaucracy, to borrow Weber’s famous metaphor for the potentially undemocratic ambitions of the modern administrative state.(11)
As soon as administrative statecraft is depicted in literature or visual arts, its cultural dimension becomes apparent. Since the later twentieth century, attempts have been made to capture this dimension in cultural studies as well. Werner Jann, for example, distinguished three dimensions of an »administrative culture« in 1983: firstly, the attitudes and opinions of society towards public administration; secondly, the patterns of orientation, the professional ethos and the forms of social interaction within the administration itself; and thirdly, the way in which the administration positions itself within its state, social and economic environment.(12) Other cultural studies approaches have pointed to the organisationally fundamental function of the forms and media of bureaucratic writing. Not only do file notes, minutes and forms serve and shape very different aspects of administrative work, but they also make a huge difference as to whether an administration primarily creates its files by hand or by means of typewriters or even computers.(13) The introduction of electronic data processing into administration, in particular, has led to a changed working environment with fewer centralised control options, with a dominance of informal contacts, loose couplings and network formations and therefore, greater uncertainty with regard to jobs and tasks. It is precisely these conditions that Niklas Luhmann identified as the reason why the concept of ›organisational culture‹ has become important in administrative science, but also in neoliberal reform agendas such as »New Public Management«.(14) In this new paradigm, culture is understood as that which is not explicitly regulated but which nonetheless shapes institutional praxes. In terms of systems theory, administrations or bureaucracies may be defined as formally structured decision-making agencies. However, in addition to this formal structure (which concerns internal hierarchies, record keeping or clearly regulated tasks of staff), an informal organisational culture inevitably emerges, which includes habits, manners and a certain self-image, all of which are important for the actions and decisions of the administration, but which themselves have never been determined by explicit decisions.
In the context of a corporate metaphor, the following distinction has therefore been made to illustrate this: the formal structure of an organisation represents its skeleton, while the informal structure or ›culture‹ represents its nervous system and its skin.(15) The ›nervous system‹ refers to the organisation’s internal ›culture‹: the informal but consequential practices and habits of administrative operations. These include, for example, certain language rules and manners within an administration and peculiarities of speech and appearance, which are, of course, of interest to art and literature. But they also include certain qualities of flexibility and creativity demanded by management programmes, which are intended to optimise staff interaction and performance and make the organisation more adaptive: inspiration techniques (such as ›brainstorming‹) or communication strategies (such as ›storytelling‹) that derive from aesthetic procedures (the surrealist automatic writing, the unfolding of narrative arcs) have recently become a part of institutional praxes.(16) Last but not least, the ›nervous system‹ of an organisation naturally also includes the appealing and ergonomically correct design of the internal bureaucratic environment, namely the ›office space‹. Since the 1960s at least, there has been a conviction in the field of work organisation that the design of office spaces has a lasting influence on the performance of employees. Concepts such as the »action office« (by Robert Probst) or »office landscapes« (by the Quickborn team) derived from empirical studies of office productivity were introduced in a bid to improve office-workers’ mental agility and creative workflow.(17) The ›skin‹ of an organisation, on the other hand, concerns its informal or cultural ›outside‹, the façade or rhetoric that it uses to present itself. By means of this façade (e.g. self-professed ›efficiency‹ and ›customer-friendliness‹), today’s organisations try to justify themselves to politicians and secure the favour of citizens or whoever their clients might be.
Questions concerning administrative culture and aesthetics, then, have increasingly come to the fore in the study of administrative systems. Against this backdrop, this issue of »Administory« presents different encounters between administration, art, design, architecture, film and literature, spanning various historical and geographical contexts, with a particular focus on questions to do with administrative aesthetics. Whilst there is a longstanding interest in administrative aesthetics in the field of public administration studies, this concept has not been closely delineated or theorised as such.(18) For the purposes of this special issue, we take administrative aesthetics to mean, briefly put, the stylistic repertoire shaping culturally determined representations and material features of state administration. In other words, paraphrasing two seminal studies of statecraft—James C. Scott’s »Seeing like a State« (1998)(19) and Davina Cooper’s »Feeling like a State« (2019)(20)—administrative aesthetics concerns »Looking like a State«.
Despite the concerted effort to move away from the paradigm of grey bureaucracy with the rise of ›New Public Management‹ in the late twentieth century, the very colourlessness and rigidity of public service institutions continue to play a significant role in legitimating institutional authority, as the outward and aesthetic manifestation of bureaucratic rationality and impartiality. Numerous scholars have observed the significance of aesthetics in the production of the authority of public institutions. Studying the design of bureaucratic spaces, Marc Raeff observes that the authority of street-level bureaucracies is produced through the creation of a »bureaucratic ambience« maintained by practices such as »prescribing the number of inkwells and the proper way of taking care of them«.(21) Similarly, examining the graphic properties of textual administrative artefacts, Lisa Gitelman observes that the quality of »looking official,« achieved through a »baroque complexity of security features,« is integral to the authority of the official document.(22)
Besides playing a crucial part in the production of state authority, administrative aesthetics also constitutes a source of work-life satisfaction (or dissatisfaction) for members of bureaucratic organisations. Whilst paperwork has a reputation as the dreariest of chores, Mirco Göpfert observes that state functionaries frequently »strive for aesthetic satisfaction« in writing and filing reports.(23) In other words, contradicting the Weberian conception of the bureaucrat’s technical competence as tending towards impersonality and dispassion, certain administrative textual genres and bureaucratic activities, in fact, leave room for personal expression, creativity and enjoyment. H. George Fredrickson’s query, »Can bureaucracy be beautiful?«, which points to the aesthetic appeal of bureaucratic »precision, harmony, routine, and ritual,« such as its »balance of form in architecture«, is thus more than justified.(24) It also goes against established theories of aesthetics. To cite one of the most canonical examples, G.W.F. Hegel’s systematic philosophy of art presented in his »Lectures on Aesthetics« postulates a strong contrast between beauty and normativity: »what we enjoy in the beauty of art is precisely the freedom of its productive and plastic energy. In its origination, as in the contemplation, of its creations we appear to escape wholly from the fetters of rule and regularity.«(25) This staged dualism between untethered creative energy and the rigidity of formal rules, which follows the classical dialectic tension between the Dionysian and the Apollonian, is clearly thrown into question by what Tess Lea describes as »bureaucracy as a source of pleasure, even jouissance«—in a word, »administrative frisson.«(26)
The richness and variety of office aesthetics is set centre stage in »Bureaucratics« (2008), Jan Banning’s pioneering photographic study of administrators in their offices. By highlighting the striking visual differences that exist between administrative cultures, Banning’s photography demonstrates the fruitfulness and importance of taking a comparative approach to the study of administrative aesthetics.(27) The same attention to cultural variation is needed in the study of »bureaucratic poetics«, whether the object of stylistic analysis is an administrative artefact or a literary text influenced by bureaucratic textuality.(28) As C. H. Sisson aptly puts it, »[i]t is not, to say the least, obvious that British officials are writing in the language of Shakespeare until one observes that French officials are, by contrast, using the language of Racine«.(29) Rather than speaking of a general ›aesthetics of administration‹—which would clearly lack scientific rigor, given that administrative cultures differ markedly both geographically and historically—the articles in this issue place great emphasis on the particularity and singularity of their individual case studies. Of course, it is equally clear that certain components of state bureaucracy are all but universal, with the obvious example being the centrality of the desk as the organising principle of the office. Indeed, as Pieter Vermeulen puts it in a recent curatorial report on a bureaucracy-themed art exhibition,(30) bureaucratic systems come with »an unmistakable visual vocabulary.«(31)
Taking a dynamic and versatile outlook on bureaucracy, mindful of historical and cultural differences, our contributors approach bureaucratic settings and procedures as aesthetic phenomena, characterised by culture-specific styles and rhetorics, investigating what kind of aesthetics they yield. The contributions to the present special issue explore various aspects of the aesthetics of bureaucratic textual genres, office spaces and administrative paraphernalia.
The relationship between administration and the visual arts continues to be explored in new media: since the iconic 1980s British satire »Yes Minister«, visual depictions of bureaucracies are no longer confined to painting, photography, feature film, or observational documentaries, but have also become the subject of popular TV series (it suffices to name here »The Office« and »Mad Men«). Writing about the latter, the article contributed by
Under the conditions of computer-supported administration, the old bureaucracies and their old tools (such as paper, pens, erasers, staples) are radically historicised, becoming peculiarly obsolete objects that now appear in a nostalgic light. The article co-authored by
Several articles in this special issue focus on authors who worked in the civil service – »writer-officials,« to borrow Ceri Sullivan’s terminology.(32) Two contributions examine literary works produced by »writer-officials« in British contexts.
Expanding on the relationship of literary writing and administration but moving to the German-speaking world,
Investigating the entanglement between Victorian bureaucracy and Gothic aesthetics, the article signed by
Literary theory and criticism also prove useful in discussing more modern representations of paperwork and institutional writing. The articles of
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Highlighting the
The articles collected here contribute to a variety of ongoing debates about culture and administrative statecraft that converge on the topic of administrative aesthetics and culture. Recent years have, in fact, seen the beginnings of a more focused scholarly conversation about administration and the arts, as epitomised by a series of timely collaborative ventures and events. In 2020, an online workshop on »Bureaucratic Poetics« was hosted by scholars at Stockholm University and Trinity College, Dublin. In 2021, a new German-language series of edited volumes was launched, »AdminiStudies«, intended to explore the forms, media technologies and aesthetics of administration. In 2022, a series of talks on »Human Dignity and Bureaucracy« was hosted by Las Casas Institute at Oxford University, featuring talks dealing with representations of public administration in literature. Taken together, this concentration of interest in administration and the arts heralds the emergence of cultural bureaucracy studies as an interdisciplinary area of study in its own right, akin to Law and Literature. Contributing to the formation of such a field, the present special issue brings together researchers from the humanities working on administration and scholars of administration interested in literature and the arts, presenting their work under the rubric of »Administrative Cultures and their Aesthetics.«
In 2023, we held our own contributors’ workshop at the Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities [Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut] (KWI) in Essen, which proved an excellent opportunity not only to discuss and sharpen the arguments put forth in the articles but also to share different disciplinary perspectives on bureaucracy and culture as a field of study. We extend our warmest thanks to KWI for making this workshop possible. The editors would also like to thank the authors for their excellent collaboration, as well as the peer reviewers who have helped to shape this issue. Special thanks go to Deputy Editor Stefan Nellen for his invaluable input throughout this project and to Simon Friedli for his prompt and savvy handling of the production process.
Cf. Friedrich Melchior Freiherr von Grimm : Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique, adressée à un souverain d’Allemagne, depuis 1753 jusqu’ en 1769, Vol. 4, Paris 1829, pp. 11, 326.
Ben Kafka: The Demon of Writing. Powers and Failures of Paperwork, New York 2012, p. 77.
Robert von Mohl: Über Bürokratie, in: Klaus von Beyne (Hg.): Politische Schriften, Wiesbaden 1966, pp. 276-310, here at pp. 281f., 294, 300.
Max Weber: Economy and Society. An Outline of Interpretative Sociology, ed. Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich, Vol. 2, Los Angeles 1978, p. 957.
Weber: Economy and Society, Vol. 1, p. 225.
David Graeber: Dead zones of the imagination. On violence, bureaucracy, and interpretive labor: The Malinowski Memorial Lecture, 2006, in: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 2/2 (2012), pp. 105-128.
Eugenie Samier: The Aesthetics of Leadership and Administration, in: B. J. Irby, G. Brown, R. Lara-Alecio, and S. Jackson (eds.): Handbook of Educational Theories, Charlotte 2013, pp. 945-952.
Benjamin Buchloch: Conceptual Art 1962-1969: From the Aesthetic of Administration to the Critique of Institutions, in: October 55 (1990), pp. 105-143.
Ceri Sullivan: Literature in the Public Service: Sublime Bureaucracy, Hampshire 2013, p. 19.
See the references in Michel Foucault: Abnormal: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1974–1975, ed. Valerio Marchetti and Antonella Salomoni, trans. Graham Burchell, New York 2003, p. 12.
As the technical director of a paint factory in postwar Italy, Primo Levi wrote about »the frightening anesthetic power of company papers, their capacity to hobble, douse, and dull every leap of intuition and every spark of talent. [...] it is not rare that the paper, a company secretion, is reabsorbed to an excessive degree, and puts to sleep, paralyses, or actually kills the organism from which it has been exuded«. Primo Levi: The Periodic Table, trans. Raymond Rosenthal, New York 1984, p. 155.
Cf. Werner Jann: Staatliche Programme und »Verwaltungskultur«. Bekämpfung des Drogenmißbrauchs und der Jugendarbeitslosigkeit in Schweden, Großbritannien und der Bundesrepublik Deutschland im Vergleich, Opladen 1983, p. 28f.
See the still fundamental study by Cornelia Vismann: Files. Law and Media Technology, transl. Geoffrey Winthrop-Young, Stanford 2008; also Lisa Gitelman: Paper Knowledge: Toward a Media History of Documents, Durham 2014; and most recently the AdminiStudies series, ed. Peter Plener, Niels Werber, Burkhardt Wolf, Berlin 2021ff., which revisits the media and cultural history of forms, protocols, apparatuses and files in several volumes.
Cf. Niklas Luhmann: Organisation und Entscheidung, Opladen 2000, p. 240.
See Stefan Kühl: Organisationskulturen beeinflussen, Wiesbaden 2018, p. 13, 22f.
See David M. Boje: The Storytelling Organization. A Study of Story Performance in an Office- Supply Firm, in: Administrative Science Quarterly 36/1 (1991), pp. 106-126 and, as an overview under the conditions of advancing digitalisation, David M. Boje: »Storytelling Organization« is Being Transformed into Discourse of »Digital Organization«, in: M@n@gement 22/2 (2019), pp. 336-356.
For more on the material and spatial developments of the office, see Nikil Saval: Cubed: A Secret History of the Workplace, New York 2014.
In 2007, Eugenie Samier heralded »an emerging field in administrative studies, aesthetic analysis«, in the editorial introduction to a special issue of the journal »Halduskultuur« on the topic of »Aesthetics of Government«. See Eugenie Samier: Editor’s Introduction. »Art-Full« Government: On the Aesthetics of Politics and Public Administration, in: Halduskultuur 8 (2007), pp. 4-13.
James C. Scott: Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed; New Haven 1998.
Davina Cooper: Feeling Like a State: Desire, Denial, and the Recasting of Authority; Durham 2019.
Marc Raeff: The Well-Ordered Police-State: Social and Institutional Change through Law in the Germanies and Russia, 1600–1800, New Haven 1983, p. 161.
Lisa Gitelman: Paper Knowledge: Toward a Media History of Documents, Durham 2014, p. ix.
Mirco Göpfert: Bureaucratic Aesthetics: Report Writing in the Nigérien Gendarmerie, American Ethnologist 40 (2013), pp. 324-334, here at p. 331.
H. George Frederickson: Can Bureaucracy Be Beautiful?, in: Public Administration Review 60/1 (2000), pp. 47–53, here at p. 50.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Introductory Lectures on Aesthetics, London 1993. p. 7.
Tess Lea: Desiring Bureaucracy, in: Annual Review of Anthropology 50/1 (2021), pp. 59–74, here at p. 68.
Adopting the opposite approach in his 2001 exhibition and photobook »Office / Kontor / オフィス«, the Swedish photographer Lars Tunbjörk plays with the uncanny monotony shared by officescapes in New York, Stockholm, and Tokyo. Dominique De Beir has altered a number of plays with the form of corporate payrolls and personnel reports for her conceptual art book titled »Poèsie administrative« (2021).
Cf. Jonathan Foster and Elliott Mills: Bureaucratic Poetics: Brian O’Nolan and the Irish Civil Service, in: The Parish Review: Journal of Flann O’Brien Studies 6/1 (2022), pp. 1–15.
C. H. Sisson: The Spirit of British Administration and some European Comparisons, London 1959, p. 119.
Exhibition: The Seduction of the Bureaucrat, curated by Pieter Vermeulen at De Garage, Mechelen, Belgium, 15.03 - 14.06.2023.
Pieter Vermeulen : La séduction du bureaucrate. Rapport de terrain d’un curateur, trad. Yasmine Mohammedi, in: Facettes 9 (2023), p. 14.
Ceri Sullivan: Literature in the Public Service: Sublime Bureaucracy, Hampshire 2013, p. 86.
Especially for non-German-speaking readers, it is perhaps interesting to mention that in German Novelle names the literary genre, as well as amendments brought to current law (Gesetzesnovelle). See also Jessica M. Maaßen: “What Is New?”: Reading Kleist’s Michael Kohlhaas (1810) as a Reflection on the Procedural Nature of Justice, in: Law & Literature 34/2 (2021), pp. 239–55.
Anthropologist Michael Herzfeld famously conceptualizes bureaucracies as »secular theodicies«. See Michael Herzfeld: The Social Production of Indifference: Exploring the Symbolic Roots of Western Bureaucracy, Chicago 1992, p. 7.
Franz Kafka: Letters to Milena (Letter of July 31, 1920), trans. Philip Boehm, London 1999, p. 126.
Kerstin Stüssel: In Vertretung. Literarische Mitschriften von Bürokratie zwischen früher Neuzeit und Gegenwart, Tübingen 2004.