What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings

This thesis examines how men and women as co-interactants in management meetings use various interactional mechanisms to play out their roles and identities, as they position their ideas in a particular way for intended meaning and effect. The study aims to demonstrate how a particular approach to t...

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Main Author: Chipunza, Linda Lorraine Cecilia
Other Authors: Love, A. M.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1994
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-19942016-04-16T04:07:53Z What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings Chipunza, Linda Lorraine Cecilia Love, A. M. Hubbard, E. H. (Ernest Hilton), 1947- Language and power Gender-role socialisation Management meetings Workplace discourse Language and gender Conversation analysis Critical discourse analysis Interactional sociolinguistics 306.44 Discourse analysis Conversation analysis Communication in management -- Sex differences -- Zimbabwe Sociolinguistics -- Zimbabwe Language and culture -- Zimbabwe Language in the workplace -- Sex differences -- Zimbabwe Language and sex -- Zimbabwe Gender identity in the workplace -- Zimbabwe This thesis examines how men and women as co-interactants in management meetings use various interactional mechanisms to play out their roles and identities, as they position their ideas in a particular way for intended meaning and effect. The study aims to demonstrate how a particular approach to the examination of naturalistic data, gathered through the use of a case study design, based on recordings and supported by a number of ethnographic strategies can, when examined and informed by conversation analysis, pragmatics and more indirectly critical discourse analysis, generate further insights into the semantic and pragmatic meanings of utterances. The study focuses on four companies in postcolonial Zimbabwe, where the entry of women into senior management positions has changed the complexion of most organisations, but men continue to be the fundamental power brokers in the corporate workplace, which remains a site of social struggle where language, power and gender are important variables. This study finds that while perceptions of power may not vary significantly between men and women, how they use language to play out this power in meetings is of significance. The study suggests that gender-linked communication styles are reflected in management of talk in areas of influence, such as the corporate boardroom. It also shows that men and women, irrespective of their levels of position power or perceived power, present themselves in meetings in different ways, possibly due to gender-role socialisation processes. Apart from generating some new insights regarding theory and research methodology, and describing and interpreting male-female interaction in an under-researched domain (management meetings in a Zimbabwean corporate setting at a time of major socio-economic transformation), it is hoped that this study will also be of value at an applicational level: serving for instance to support applied linguistic goals such as the development of Language for Specific Purposes courses; and conscientising corporate citizens, in particular, to be more accommodating about, and appreciative of differences in communication styles that may be gender-based. Linguistics D.Litt. et Phil. (Linguistics) 2009-08-25T10:58:47Z 2009-08-25T10:58:47Z 2009-08-25T10:58:47Z 2007-11-30 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1994 en 1 online resource (vii, 333 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Language and power
Gender-role socialisation
Management meetings
Workplace discourse
Language and gender
Conversation analysis
Critical discourse analysis
Interactional sociolinguistics
306.44
Discourse analysis
Conversation analysis
Communication in management -- Sex differences -- Zimbabwe
Sociolinguistics -- Zimbabwe
Language and culture -- Zimbabwe
Language in the workplace -- Sex differences -- Zimbabwe
Language and sex -- Zimbabwe
Gender identity in the workplace -- Zimbabwe
spellingShingle Language and power
Gender-role socialisation
Management meetings
Workplace discourse
Language and gender
Conversation analysis
Critical discourse analysis
Interactional sociolinguistics
306.44
Discourse analysis
Conversation analysis
Communication in management -- Sex differences -- Zimbabwe
Sociolinguistics -- Zimbabwe
Language and culture -- Zimbabwe
Language in the workplace -- Sex differences -- Zimbabwe
Language and sex -- Zimbabwe
Gender identity in the workplace -- Zimbabwe
Chipunza, Linda Lorraine Cecilia
What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
description This thesis examines how men and women as co-interactants in management meetings use various interactional mechanisms to play out their roles and identities, as they position their ideas in a particular way for intended meaning and effect. The study aims to demonstrate how a particular approach to the examination of naturalistic data, gathered through the use of a case study design, based on recordings and supported by a number of ethnographic strategies can, when examined and informed by conversation analysis, pragmatics and more indirectly critical discourse analysis, generate further insights into the semantic and pragmatic meanings of utterances. The study focuses on four companies in postcolonial Zimbabwe, where the entry of women into senior management positions has changed the complexion of most organisations, but men continue to be the fundamental power brokers in the corporate workplace, which remains a site of social struggle where language, power and gender are important variables. This study finds that while perceptions of power may not vary significantly between men and women, how they use language to play out this power in meetings is of significance. The study suggests that gender-linked communication styles are reflected in management of talk in areas of influence, such as the corporate boardroom. It also shows that men and women, irrespective of their levels of position power or perceived power, present themselves in meetings in different ways, possibly due to gender-role socialisation processes. Apart from generating some new insights regarding theory and research methodology, and describing and interpreting male-female interaction in an under-researched domain (management meetings in a Zimbabwean corporate setting at a time of major socio-economic transformation), it is hoped that this study will also be of value at an applicational level: serving for instance to support applied linguistic goals such as the development of Language for Specific Purposes courses; and conscientising corporate citizens, in particular, to be more accommodating about, and appreciative of differences in communication styles that may be gender-based. === Linguistics === D.Litt. et Phil. (Linguistics)
author2 Love, A. M.
author_facet Love, A. M.
Chipunza, Linda Lorraine Cecilia
author Chipunza, Linda Lorraine Cecilia
author_sort Chipunza, Linda Lorraine Cecilia
title What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
title_short What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
title_full What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
title_fullStr What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
title_full_unstemmed What men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
title_sort what men say, how women say : an exploration of the interactional mechanisms at play in management meetings
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1994
work_keys_str_mv AT chipunzalindalorrainececilia whatmensayhowwomensayanexplorationoftheinteractionalmechanismsatplayinmanagementmeetings
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