This article explores the role of humour, specifically banter, in addressing gendered organizational tensions within the UK Fire and Rescue Service during a period of modernizing change. Such tensions reflect who holds authority and who is deemed to belong, and we explore how banter is used to both contest and confirm authority associated with the formal rank system and the informal, masculinist ideal-typical worker in this context. We discuss banter’s various roles as a cohering mode of humorous workplace communication, one that can reduce tension and consolidate authority and belonging, as well as its boundary setting, testing, and crossing capacities. In terms of the latter, we ask whether banter can genuinely trouble masculinist organiz...
Humorous joking, teasing, and banter are fundamental forms of social intercourse. This paper is abou...
Humour is becoming an increasingly prevalent topic in organization studies. On the one hand, humour ...
The (re)production and persistence of inequalities in male-dominated organizations is an ongoing iss...
This article considers the role of humour as a disciplinary technology. Using the British military a...
Banter has been defined by the Cambridge Dictionary as ‘conversation that is funny and not serious’....
Historically, much research has focused on the use of humour, especially following traumatic events....
Masculinity is pervasive in the field of policing, present in both the culture and organizational st...
Workplaces constitute sites where individuals "do gender" while at the same time constructing their ...
Workplace humour is an important component of organisational culture and social behaviour, yet this ...
This article analyses a study that reveals employees using humour to resist an organization's normat...
This article engages in debates stimulated by previous work published in Organization Studies, and m...
After first considering some of the challenges of defining and measuring the concept of politeness, ...
This paper aims to examine further how and when the phenomenon of humour is used in the workplace an...
Public authorities have traditionally used an official language style in public, but currently socia...
This paper focuses on response strategies to humour as listener activities. Drawing on authentic dis...
Humorous joking, teasing, and banter are fundamental forms of social intercourse. This paper is abou...
Humour is becoming an increasingly prevalent topic in organization studies. On the one hand, humour ...
The (re)production and persistence of inequalities in male-dominated organizations is an ongoing iss...
This article considers the role of humour as a disciplinary technology. Using the British military a...
Banter has been defined by the Cambridge Dictionary as ‘conversation that is funny and not serious’....
Historically, much research has focused on the use of humour, especially following traumatic events....
Masculinity is pervasive in the field of policing, present in both the culture and organizational st...
Workplaces constitute sites where individuals "do gender" while at the same time constructing their ...
Workplace humour is an important component of organisational culture and social behaviour, yet this ...
This article analyses a study that reveals employees using humour to resist an organization's normat...
This article engages in debates stimulated by previous work published in Organization Studies, and m...
After first considering some of the challenges of defining and measuring the concept of politeness, ...
This paper aims to examine further how and when the phenomenon of humour is used in the workplace an...
Public authorities have traditionally used an official language style in public, but currently socia...
This paper focuses on response strategies to humour as listener activities. Drawing on authentic dis...
Humorous joking, teasing, and banter are fundamental forms of social intercourse. This paper is abou...
Humour is becoming an increasingly prevalent topic in organization studies. On the one hand, humour ...
The (re)production and persistence of inequalities in male-dominated organizations is an ongoing iss...