BUREAUGRAPHIES

(Administration after the age of bureaucracy)

2024 to 2027
Sponsored by
FWFDFGSNF

Introduction to the project

Ever since “bureaucracies” have been talked about, state administration has been criticized for being cumbersome, overbearing or non-transparent. However, public administrations are not simply an evil to be remedied, an encroachment to be fended off: according to their mandate, administrations first and foremost create legal security. They are official bodies whose decisions are binding throughout the state and whose decisions are based on a particular rationality: on the basis of a complex paperwork of notes or reports, protocols or files. Calls for reforms of state administration under the banner of “de-bureaucratization”, streamlining and greater efficiency usually ignore one thing: the downside of shrinking public bureaucracies is almost always the proliferation of their administrative procedures beyond the organization. The project understands such administrative practices, which were previously still entrusted to civil servants in a sovereign mandate, but are now increasingly in the hands of self-governing citizens, as “bureaugraphies”. Their proliferation has led to a surge in control and micromanagement in the social and private spheres, as the recent dismantling of US administrative authorities shows, which threatens to be flanked by the installation of privately run companies endowed with parastatal authority. In the end, the project, which examines the administrative cultures of Austria, Switzerland and the Federal Republic of Germany from a historical perspective, revolves around a paradox: the taming of “bureaucratic” routines leads to the proliferation of “bureaucratic” procedures on a political, technical and aesthetic level.

Subprojects

Recent publications

View all publications ↗

Upcoming events

9–10 October 2025

University of Cologne

Workshop: “Grenzstellen” (boundary points)

Literary and Sociological Modelling of the Organization–Environment Boundary

The WEAVE project “Bureaugraphies” (Vienna, Basel, Friedrichshafen, Cologne) investigates the configurations of cultural, media, and writing techniques of administration that can be observed—both within and beyond formal rules, as well as inside and outside concrete office environments—amid the various transformations of bureaucratic orders in the 20th century. Focusing on the resulting question of the relay function of bureaucratic practices between administrative systems and their environments, the workshop places at its center a concept from Niklas Luhmann’s early work in organizational sociology that has so far received little attention: “Grenzstellen” (boundary points). The discussion will explore how organizations present themselves at their margins and how they must reveal their assumptions about the environment.

To the event page ↗

Contact

University of Vienna
Department of German Studies

Universitätsring 1

AT-1010 Vienna


Professor Dr. Burkhardt Wolf
Dr. Kira Kaufmann
Maximilian Scheffold MA
University of Cologne
Department of German Language and Literature I

Modern German literary studies

Albertus-Magnus-Platz

D-50923 Cologne

Professor Nicolas Pethes

Dr. Livia Kleinwaechter
University of Basel
Faculty of Humanities

Department of Arts, Media, Philosophy



Professor Dr. Markus Krajewski

Eliseo Galli MA
Zeppelin University
Department of Sociological Theory

Am Seemooser Horn 20

88045 Friedrichshafen | Bodensee

Professor Dr. Maren Lehmann

Yannick Allgeier MA
For general inquiries and information about the project, please contact kira.kaufmann@unvie.ac.at