Abstract: This paper is based on two PhD projects on cultural change and
innovation in complex infrastructural networks. The research projects focus on
alternative ways in which particular narratives (and counter narratives) are
transformed into organizational practice. Data collection is based on
ethnographic reconstruction. In this paper we will argue that the acceptance,
adoption and dissemination of narratives in innovation based contexts is
closely linked to processes of identification and legitimation. We will
introduce and analyze two cases in which different types of organizational
enactment occur: the case of the Dutch Railways and the case of the ministry of
Transport, Public Works and Water Management. We conclude that four types of
change scripts (blind scripts, dynamic scripts, transformative scripts and
direct scripts) are related to the discursive practices that occur in dynamic
processes of organizational change. These change scripts lead us to a better
understanding of innovation dynamics, especially regarding the ways narratives
of change are transformed into praxis through processes of social editing.
Keywords: Narratives of change, editing, identity, legitimacy, railways, public works, water management