Publikacja:

Viewing organizing through a feminist lens: The discursive and material creations of individual and organization identities.

Data

2007
Artykuł
 
cris.legacyid6570
cris.virtual.journalance#PLACEHOLDER_PARENT_METADATA_VALUE#
cris.virtualsource.journalance648ce774-05ae-47f3-8a1b-62524c23badd
dc.abstract.plIn recent years, feminist scholars have made substantial inroads toward a better understanding of the intricacies and complexities of organizing. Through the metatheoretical lens of a “feminist communicology of organization,” gender is seen as a dynamic principle of organizing, and organizations are seen as fundamentally gendered. By looking at both the macro- and micro-level activities of gendered organizing, we obtain a much richer, organic understanding of the processes inherent in creating and sustaining organizations. Such an approach helps us to understand one of the newest forms of organization-the virtual one-that exists both discursively and materially only in the virtual world. To better understand how organizing is accomplished in the virtual world, we have chosen to focus on the postings to a “renegade” web site called “Teamster.net.” This site was established by and for members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters but is not sanctioned by The Teamsters. Through content analysis, we studied the ongoing discussions concerning if, and how, this site should be moderated, and by whom. We found that these chat room dialogues exhibit the key characteristics of multiple discourses occurring simultaneously. Contributors are both social actors and the objects of multiple discourses that seek to normalize and control these actors, often occurring in disjunctive and contradictory ways. While contributors acknowledge the need for both social equality and respect, their mechanisms for dealing with these contradictions are most often unconscious; in psychoanalytic terms, compromise formations. Thus we offer this deeper understanding of virtual organizations through the metatheoretical lens of feminist communicology and the theoretical lens of compromise formations.
dc.contributor.affiliationEmporia State University
dc.contributor.affiliationUniversity of Central Oklahoma
dc.contributor.authorAlexis Downs
dc.contributor.authorDonna Carlon
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-25T16:45:41Z
dc.date.available2025-07-25T16:45:41Z
dc.date.issued2007
dc.date.published2007
dc.description.issue4
dc.description.physical145-166
dc.description.volume6
dc.identifier.issn1532-5555
dc.identifier.urihttps://repozytorium.kozminski.edu.pl/handle/item/3001
dc.languageen
dc.relation.ispartofTamara: Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry
dc.relation.pages145-166
dc.rightsCC-BY-4.0
dc.subjectFeminist communicology
dc.subjectcompromise formations
dc.subjectorganizing
dc.subtypeOriginal
dc.title

Viewing organizing through a feminist lens: The discursive and material creations of individual and organization identities.

dc.typeArticle
dspace.entity.typePublication