“…This essay encourages organizational scholars to trespass the borders of their fields of inquiry by embracing the structural and more slowly changing historical components that constitute the matter of past and contemporary epochs. Despite calls to incorporate history into organization studies (Clark & Rowlinson, 2004;Kieser, 1994;Kipping & Üsdiken, 2014), concepts and frameworks imported from the field of history are few, and thorny issues remain about what role history should have in organizational studies (Kipping & Üsdiken, 2014;O'Sullivan & Graham, 2010), how to reconcile the two disciplines conceptually (Diaz-Bone, 2014;Rowlinson, Hassard, & Decker, 2013), and how to enhance their integration (Greenwood & Bernardi, 2013). The first hindrance is that organizational studies often do not specify a historical period, rather arbitrarily they divide time into successive stages with no attention to duration or transition phases (Kieser, 1994).…”