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مؤلف Schönhärl , Korinna |
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Emotions in decision-making processes: the family bank Eichthal and its investment decisions for Greece in the XIXth century / Schönhärl , Korinna in Entreprises et histoire., 91 (Trimestrielle)
[مقالة]
عنوان : Emotions in decision-making processes: the family bank Eichthal and its investment decisions for Greece in the XIXth century نوع الوثيقة : نص مطبوع مؤلفين : Schönhärl , Korinna, مؤلف تاريخ النشر : 2018 مقالة في الصفحة: P14-P28 اللغة : إنكليزي (eng) الكلمة المفتاح : Emotions , decision-making processes, family bank Eichthal , investment, decisions , Greece, XIXth century خلاصة : What role do emotions play in the decision-making processes of family firms? Based on recent research on the history of emotions, this question is examined in the decision-making process of the Paris-based family bank d'Eichthal concerning its investment in Greece in the 1830 s. The paper argues, firstly, that the strong emotional ties between one family member sent to Greece as a broker and the rest of the family in Paris and Munich considerably influenced the decision-making process of the family. Secondly, the paper examines the difficulties of this broker, the family's "rotten apple", to manage his own emotional life and its expression in a suitable manner. It argues that the symbolic potential of Greece as the intellectual target of ardent philhellenism in Europe in the 19th century was important for him to manage this task in a way that was acceptable to his family.
in Entreprises et histoire. > 91 (Trimestrielle) . - P14-P28[مقالة] Emotions in decision-making processes: the family bank Eichthal and its investment decisions for Greece in the XIXth century [نص مطبوع ] / Schönhärl , Korinna, مؤلف . - 2018 . - P14-P28.
اللغة : إنكليزي (eng)
in Entreprises et histoire. > 91 (Trimestrielle) . - P14-P28
الكلمة المفتاح : Emotions , decision-making processes, family bank Eichthal , investment, decisions , Greece, XIXth century خلاصة : What role do emotions play in the decision-making processes of family firms? Based on recent research on the history of emotions, this question is examined in the decision-making process of the Paris-based family bank d'Eichthal concerning its investment in Greece in the 1830 s. The paper argues, firstly, that the strong emotional ties between one family member sent to Greece as a broker and the rest of the family in Paris and Munich considerably influenced the decision-making process of the family. Secondly, the paper examines the difficulties of this broker, the family's "rotten apple", to manage his own emotional life and its expression in a suitable manner. It argues that the symbolic potential of Greece as the intellectual target of ardent philhellenism in Europe in the 19th century was important for him to manage this task in a way that was acceptable to his family.