Organization literature has extensively explored the crucial role of creativity in enabling organizations to survive in fast-paced environments. However, there are still substantial misunderstandings about the way in which creative processes unfold. In most studies, creativity has been analyzed using a compositional sequential model. Building on interpretive inductive research, conducted in the empirical field of Italian haute cuisine, this study develops a framework for the following creative processes, emerging within the field: improvisation, experimentation, trial-and-error, and imagination. The main difference between these processes is the relationship between four aggregate dimensions: process triggers, planning, the unfolding of creative phases, and trialing. This new framework offers a more comprehensive understanding of creativity as it is enacted, shedding light on its real potential in contemporary organizations. C: In every dish, Chef Gusteau always has something unexpected. I will show you. I memorized all his recipes. L: Always do something unexpected. C: No. Follow the recipe. L: But you just said that… C: No, no, no. It was his job to be unexpected. It is our job to… Follow the recipe. (“Ratatouille,” min. 43, Pixar, 2007) C: What are you doing? You are supposed to be preparing the Gusteau recipe. L: This is the recipe. C: The recipe does not call for white truffle oil! What else have you…? You are improvising? This is no time to experiment. The customers are waiting! (“Ratatouille,” min. 48, Pixar, 2007)

The Ratatouille paradox. An inductive study of creativity in haute cuisine / Leone, L.. - In: TECHNOVATION. - ISSN 0166-4972. - 92-93:(2020), pp. 1-18. [10.1016/j.technovation.2018.11.003]

The Ratatouille paradox. An inductive study of creativity in haute cuisine

Leone L.
2020

Abstract

Organization literature has extensively explored the crucial role of creativity in enabling organizations to survive in fast-paced environments. However, there are still substantial misunderstandings about the way in which creative processes unfold. In most studies, creativity has been analyzed using a compositional sequential model. Building on interpretive inductive research, conducted in the empirical field of Italian haute cuisine, this study develops a framework for the following creative processes, emerging within the field: improvisation, experimentation, trial-and-error, and imagination. The main difference between these processes is the relationship between four aggregate dimensions: process triggers, planning, the unfolding of creative phases, and trialing. This new framework offers a more comprehensive understanding of creativity as it is enacted, shedding light on its real potential in contemporary organizations. C: In every dish, Chef Gusteau always has something unexpected. I will show you. I memorized all his recipes. L: Always do something unexpected. C: No. Follow the recipe. L: But you just said that… C: No, no, no. It was his job to be unexpected. It is our job to… Follow the recipe. (“Ratatouille,” min. 43, Pixar, 2007) C: What are you doing? You are supposed to be preparing the Gusteau recipe. L: This is the recipe. C: The recipe does not call for white truffle oil! What else have you…? You are improvising? This is no time to experiment. The customers are waiting! (“Ratatouille,” min. 48, Pixar, 2007)
2020
92-93
1
18
The Ratatouille paradox. An inductive study of creativity in haute cuisine / Leone, L.. - In: TECHNOVATION. - ISSN 0166-4972. - 92-93:(2020), pp. 1-18. [10.1016/j.technovation.2018.11.003]
Leone, L.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1246880
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