Socio-Scientific Fundamentals
        
        
        
        
        
        
       Sensemaking of an Emerging Concept 
While the literature on framing has importantly expanded our understanding of frame 
creation and contests from an interpretive point of view, previous studies have largely 
neglected the structural contexts in which framing activities occur. In this study, we 
propose extending the framing approach by incorporating insights from the literature on 
sensemaking to examine how and when opportunities for meaning creation open up and 
how this affects subsequent discursive processes. Connecting framing and sensemaking 
better enables us to examine how structural factors prompt and bound discursive 
processes, affecting when and where frame contests emerge. We demonstrate the utility of 
this approach by examining changes in the discourse of globalization. Using qualitative 
and quantitative analyses of newspaper articles and corporate press releases, we trace 
the emergence of globalization discourse, its diffusion, and the increasing contention 
that surrounds it. Our findings show how and where globalization discourse emerged in 
response to greater U.S. involvement with the international economy, and how later 
frame contests over the meaning of globalization have depended on the interests of the 
actors involved. 
H 
ow major events are constructed in public 
discourse continues to be a topic of inter- 
est across disciplines. Particularly large-scale 
transformations such as industrialization, the 
Direct correspondence to Peer C. Fiss, Queen's 
School of Business, 143 Union Street, Kingston, 
Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6 ([email protected] 
su.ca), or Paul M. Hirsch, Department of 
Management and Organizations, Kellogg School of 
Management, 2001 Sherida ...
         
         
        
        
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