5 th BAAL GaLSig Gender and Language in the Public Space Gender, language and leadership: Exploring research dissemination Louise Mullany Aston University 20 th September 2011
Mar 28, 2015
5th BAAL GaLSig
Gender and Language in the Public Space
Gender, language and leadership: Exploring research dissemination
Louise Mullany
Aston University20th September 2011
Event themes & questions
• Public space: Businesses and Organisations
• Academic-practitioner relationships
• ‘Impact’, ‘end-user’/’community engagement’
Background• Business School-English Language and Linguistics collaborations
• MSc Communication and Entrepreneurship 2009-present
• Gender and language components
• Student-based consultancy work in the local community
Current collaborationCommunity-based consultancies
‘Leadership Communication: Presence and Impact’: HR managers, training directors, practitioners etc.
Gender and language components
- Organisational Communication- Applied Linguistics - Drama/Performance
Aims and objectivesApplied Linguistic ‘toolkits’
Reflection and consciousness raising
‘Self-awareness and communication dynamics’
- Consciousness-raising
- Critical language awareness
- Workplace cultures
Aims and objectivesApplied linguist as problem solver (in a responsive, consultancy mode)
Applied linguist as educator (in a proactive, futurist mode)
Applied linguist as joint collaborator and co-researcher (in a consultative, reflexive mode) Sarangi 2006: 201)
‘Effective linguistics’ Sarangi (2006: 206)
Aims and objectivesAt some point, our research has to be able to travel out of the academy in order to draw attention to and challenge unquestioned practices that reify certain behaviours as being morally or aesthetically better than others. We should never cease to engage actively with and challenge assumptions about gender norms and loudly draw attention to the way power, privilege and social authority interact with and are naturalised as properties of independent social categories.
Holmes and Meyerhoff (2003: 14)
Theory, methodology and practice (Mills and Mullany 2011)
Methods of delivery
3 stage process:
-pre-course preparation
- 2 day course
- Follow-up electronically & one-to-one
Portfolio pre-assembly & 360 degree feedback
Active learning sets
Consent for research of these resources
Adapting academic research
Advantages/uniqueness:
•Real world, non-scripted data from empirical research
•Theory as practice
• Applied linguistic toolkits
Problems and Challenges
•Managing expectations•Register and style•Diagrammatic representations etc.•Transcription presentations•Decontextualisation of materials•Political conflicts (Mullany 2008)
Adapting academic research Theory as practice:
Communities of practice
Gender and language ideologies
Gender stereotyping
Gendered discourses
Gendered workplace cultures
The double bind: evaluations and judgements
Not just gender: Social class, race, ethnicity, culture, regionality etc.
Adapting academic research
Applied linguistic toolkits:
Turn-takingConversational floorsSpeech actsHumour Small talkPoliteness/relational workConflict management and conflict talk
Illustration of materials
• Awareness raising• Own questions and issues• Tailored to particular organisations• Workplace cultures and communities of
practice (Holmes 2006; Schnurr 2009)
Discourse of gender difference, including gender and language ideologies (Sunderland 2004, Cameron 2007, 2009)
Communities of practice
a) Mutual engagementb) A joint negotiated enterprisec) A shared repertoire of negotiable
resources Wenger (1998); Wenger, McDermott and Snyder (2002)
FeminineFeminine MasculineMasculine
indirectindirect directdirect
conciliatoryconciliatory confrontationalconfrontational
facilitativefacilitative competitivecompetitive
collaborativecollaborative autonomousautonomous
minor contribution in publicminor contribution in public dominates (public) talking dominates (public) talking timetime
supportive feedbacksupportive feedback aggressive interruptionsaggressive interruptions
person/process orientedperson/process oriented task/outcome-orientedtask/outcome-oriented
affectively orientedaffectively oriented referentially orientedreferentially oriented
Widely cited features of “feminine” and “masculine” interactional style (Holmes and Stubbe 2003: 574)
Amy is explaining departmental policy to Kirsty and Eddie
Amy: we’re going to be carrying it for more than fifteen weeks=
Karen: =yeah it’s ten weeks for stock and it will be calculated on how many sales within five weeks
Amy: No it’s longer than that Karen Karen: Oh (.) right Amy: It’s longer
Mullany (2007: 108)
Meeting dataMeeting data
Karen: Amy’s subordinate:Amy is a very strong character very straightforward erm
says what she means is very direct and it can be quite an overpowering experience talking to her.
Mullany (2007: 171)
Kelly: Amy’s status equal:Females are more caring generally (.) naturally more
nurturing they’ve definitely got certain qualities that are different to men but some females can be real tyrants
Mullany (2007: 172)
Interview dataInterview data
Identity construction: Sex-role stereotypes
• The mother role• The seductress• The pet• The iron maiden (Kanter 1977)
Revisited in Baxter (2010) and Mullany (2010)
Two female account managers here are not slow to use the combination of will and gender to good effect when they can see an opportunity to do so and that’s usually in the direction of a male person get what they want I’ve no doubt about it… that’s causing erm resentment from other males you know there are other account managers who were who were certainly were at the same level as them who feel they’re dropping behind because of the ability of the two females to exert their will gender mix to good effect.
Mullany (2010: 188)
Identifying workplace discourses
• Presentation of research examples + participants identify the gendered discourses in their own workplace cultures
• Dominant discourse of gender difference (Sunderland 2004)
Gendered discourses and leadership
– Discourse of female emotionality/irrationality
– Discourse of motherhood and family– Dominant discourses of femininity:
Image and sexuality– Resistant discourses
(Mullany 2007:169-204)
Gendered discourses and leadership
Discourse of masculinisation (Baxter 2003)Gendered corporations (Baxter 2010):
Male-dominatedGender dividedGender multiple
Next steps• Piloting of materials• Working with individual
organisations• Development of resources and
interdisciplinary collaboration• Standalone leadership
communication and gender course