A note on using hermeneutics for literature review: for MBA students (information from perplexity.ai)
My question 1: "In the context of conducting literature review and writing up the MBA dissertation chapter of "literature review', notably on the relevant concept definitions, analytical theories and theoretical perspectives, highlight 5 main literature review practices from the lens of hermeneutics. It would be useful to provide a few illustrative examples on the literature review topic of "change leadership"."
The reply: "Hermeneutics treats the literature review as an interpretive, iterative dialog between you and the texts, rather than a one‑off “summary of what others said”. From this lens, five core practices become central: reflexive pre‑understanding, iterative hermeneutic circling, meaning‑oriented classification, critical dialoguing with texts, and integrative argument building.
1. Make pre-understandings explicit
For an MBA literature review on change leadership, you could:
State your initial stance: e.g., “This review begins from an interest in how managers mobilise people during digital transformation, drawing on prior exposure to Kotter’s 8‑step model and transformational leadership theories.”
Acknowledge your context: e.g., working in Asian organisations may sensitize you to hierarchy, face‑saving, and incremental rather than radical change.
2. Use the hermeneutic circle iteratively
Applied to change leadership:
Start with seminal works (e.g., transformational leadership, Kotter, sensemaking‑based views of leading change) and sketch a provisional map (e.g., trait‑based, process‑based, relational perspectives).
- As you read a qualitative, context‑rich study on leaders navigating resistance in healthcare or education, revisit your earlier map and refine categories (e.g., add “emotional and ethical practices in change leadership”).
3. Classify and map for meaning, not just mechanics
For change leadership, you might organise the literature around:
How change leadership is defined:
Theoretical perspectives used:
4. Read texts as dialog partners, not data points
For example, on the concept of change leadership:
- When an article equates effective change leadership with charismatic vision and top‑down communication, you could ask: what assumptions about followers and power underpin this?
- When phenomenological studies show leaders’ lived struggles, ambivalence, and emotional labour during change, you can contrast this with more heroic, prescriptive models and discuss what each view illuminates and obscures.
In writing, this appears as dialogical phrasing, such as:
- “While X conceptualises change leadership as primarily visionary and top‑down, Y’s hermeneutic analysis of leaders’ lived experience foregrounds ambiguity, ethical tension, and mutual influence, challenging simplistic heroic portrayals.”
5. Build an integrative, interpretive argument
For your MBA dissertation on change leadership, this might involve:
- Arguing that change leadership should be understood as “relational sense‑making under conditions of uncertainty”, synthesising transformational, sensemaking, and relational leadership theories.
Showing how this interpretation justifies your chosen analytical theories (e.g., sensemaking theory plus a leadership style framework) and your research questions about how managers in a particular sector narrate and enact change.
In the chapter, the final sections explicitly articulate this integrative stance, for example:
- “Drawing on hermeneutic engagement with the literature, this study conceptualises change leadership as a situated, relational practice through which leaders and followers co‑create meanings of change, rather than a set of discrete steps applied to passive recipients.”
These five practices—reflexivity, hermeneutic circling, meaning‑centred classification, dialogical critique, and integrative argumentation—allow the literature review chapter to become an interpretive foundation for your empirical work on change leadership, rather than a descriptive backdrop."
My question 2: "Please suggest 3 YouTube videos that introduce hermeneutics for learning purpose by MBA students."
The reply: "Three YouTube videos introduce hermeneutics accessibly for MBA students tackling research methods in dissertations like literature reviews. These selections prioritize clear explanations of the hermeneutic circle, its role in qualitative analysis, and relevance to interpretive social science, aligning with your interest in structured educational videos for research philosophies.
Hermeneutics Simply Explained
Philosophy of Qualitative Research: Hermeneutics
Intro to Hermeneutics, Part 1
A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.