EPISODE · Apr 18, 2026 · 1H 22M
Contextualizing Entrepreneurship (Welter 2011) - Weekend Classics VSSER26
from Revise and Resubmit - The Mayukh Show · host Mayukh Mukhopadhyay
English Podcast starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:18:58Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:40:08Danish Podcast Starts at 01:03:31ReferenceWelter, F. (2011). Contextualizing Entrepreneurship—Conceptual Challenges and Ways Forward. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 35(1), 165-184. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6520.2010.00427.xYoutube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherPodcast Websitehttps://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit/VSSER-2026 Paper Explainer Websitehttps://mayukhpsm.github.io/vsser26_welter2011/🎙️✨ Welcome to Revise and Resubmit and to this episode of Weekend Classics.I am glad you are here, because today we are stepping into a paper that quietly changes the way we see entrepreneurship, not as a story of lone genius or raw hustle, but as something shaped by place, time, memory, institutions, and the people around us.📚 Today’s featured paper is Contextualizing Entrepreneurship: Conceptual Challenges and Ways Forward by Friederike Welter, published in Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, an FT50 listed journal, in January 2011 by SAGE Publications.What I love about this paper is that it asks us to slow down. It asks us to look again. Because entrepreneurship does not happen in thin air. It happens somewhere. It happens under pressure. It happens within families, within neighborhoods, within rules, within histories, and sometimes within the ruins of systems that have already collapsed.🌍 Welter reminds us that context is not background scenery. It is part of the plot. Social context shapes what feels possible. Spatial context shapes where ideas can travel. Institutional context shapes what gets supported, what gets punished, and who even gets to begin.And that changes everything.The entrepreneur, then, is not just a bold individual standing against the world. The entrepreneur is also someone moving through a world already crowded with customs, constraints, expectations, and invisible permissions. In that sense, context can be a gift 🎁 or a burden 🧱. It can open doors, and it can quietly lock them.What makes this paper especially powerful is that it does not just say context matters. It shows that entrepreneurship itself can also reshape context. People do not merely inherit environments. Sometimes, through action, persistence, and improvisation, they alter them.💡 So this is not just a paper about entrepreneurship. It is a paper about humility. About seeing economic life as human life. About resisting the temptation to tell clean, heroic stories when the truth is messier, richer, and far more interesting.As we enter this conversation together, I want you to hold onto one simple but unsettling thought: if entrepreneurship always emerges from context, then how much of what we call talent, vision, or courage is really a conversation between the person and the world that made them possible? 🤔🙏 My thanks to Friederike Welter and to SAGE Publications for this remarkable contribution.🔔 If you enjoy episodes like this, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, and subscribe to the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher.🎧 You can also find the show on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcast.So come with me into this paper, and let us ask the question that lingers after the first page and stays long after the last: when we celebrate the entrepreneur, are we really seeing the individual, or are we finally beginning to see the world that made that individual imaginable?
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Contextualizing Entrepreneurship (Welter 2011) - Weekend Classics VSSER26
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