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Introduction: Theoretical Insights into the Practices of Revealing and Concealing Gender within Organizations

In: Revealing and Concealing Gender

Author

Listed:
  • Patricia Lewis

    (University of Kent)

  • Ruth Simpson

    (Brunel University)

Abstract

Issues of visibility and invisibility are becoming increasingly apparent in gender research in organizations. Such work is based on a recognition of the significance of (in)visibility in understanding experiences of advantage and disadvantage in work contexts — and how these experiences can impact on identity, attitudes, culture and careers. From a variety of perspectives, such work has highlighted how visibility and invisibility ‘play out’ in organizations — revealing the often hidden and gendered processes of organizing and how these processes can be concealed within norms, practices and values. Thus, early research in organization studies critiqued the gender blind orientation to theorizing about work and organization (e.g. Linstead, 2000; Wilson, 1996) which universalized male subjectivity and sought to make visible women’s experiences in organizations. More recent work has helped to make visible those ‘suppressed’ aspects of organizational life, hidden by dominant management and masculine discourses, such as violence and sexuality (e.g. Hearn and Parkin, 2001). Other work has explored the problems women face as highly visible ‘tokens’ in different male dominated contexts (Cross and Bagilhole, 2002; Kanter, 1977; Simpson, 2000); how traditionally feminine skills are ‘disappeared’ into the embodied dispositions of women (Fletcher, 1999; Tyler and Abbott, 1998; Taylor and Tyler, 1998); how equal opportunity policies, through a rhetoric of meritocracy and gender justice, can serve to conceal continuing gender disadvantage.

Suggested Citation

  • Patricia Lewis & Ruth Simpson, 2010. "Introduction: Theoretical Insights into the Practices of Revealing and Concealing Gender within Organizations," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: Patricia Lewis & Ruth Simpson (ed.), Revealing and Concealing Gender, pages 1-22, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-0-230-28557-6_1
    DOI: 10.1057/9780230285576_1
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Ruth Woodfield, 2016. "Gender and the achievement of skilled status in the workplace: the case of women leaders in the UK Fire and Rescue Service," Work, Employment & Society, British Sociological Association, vol. 30(2), pages 237-255, April.
    2. Francis J. Greene & Liang Han & Susan Marlow, 2013. "Like Mother, Like Daughter? Analyzing Maternal Influences upon Women's Entrepreneurial Propensity," Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, , vol. 37(4), pages 687-711, July.
    3. Jennifer Manyweathers & Jessie Lymn & Geraldine Rurenga & Katie Murrell-Orgill & Shara Cameron & Cate Thomas, 2020. "The Lived Experience of Gender and Gender Equity Policies at a Regional Australian University," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 9(7), pages 1-12, July.

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