© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. We consider how genre and gender are implicated in academic writing about work organizations, noting that masterful, rational and penetrating masculine forms have long been dominant. The result is the privileging of a masculine style of writing that has come to be seen both as gender neutral and mandatory. This has served both to marginalize women's writing and to disable men's femininity. To subvert and undermine this, we consider the possibilities of a feminine writing of organization that defies rational categorization so as to enable a multitude of affectual voices and texts to cross over from exclusion. This creates a space where feminine writing can be encouraged and published and where issues surrounding...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
This edited book inserts postfeminism (PF) as a critical concept into understandings of work and org...
The article demonstrates management discourse without masculine subtexts. In two organizations in th...
We consider how genre and gender are implicated in academic writing about work organizations, noting...
While gender very much holds a place in organization studies, this is primarily in relation to being...
While gender very much holds a place in organization studies, this is primarily in relation to being...
This paper examines the writing practices most often associated with French feminists called écritur...
Is there a difference between writing by men and that produced by women? What does that difference l...
A series of profound cleavages run through the history of writing - the fault lines opened by the so...
This article reexamines the treatment of gender and feminism in technical, business, and workplace w...
© The Author(s) 2018. This article critically reviews the use of non-conventional writing in organiz...
Purpose - This paper draws on concepts of ‘female masculinity’ to interrogate how hegemonic genderin...
The relationship between gender and discourse has been a focus of theoretical and empirical attentio...
Challenging yet extending extant efforts in organisation studies to disrupt the gender divide, we de...
This article focuses on the process of reading and its role in the construction of knowledge. Readin...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
This edited book inserts postfeminism (PF) as a critical concept into understandings of work and org...
The article demonstrates management discourse without masculine subtexts. In two organizations in th...
We consider how genre and gender are implicated in academic writing about work organizations, noting...
While gender very much holds a place in organization studies, this is primarily in relation to being...
While gender very much holds a place in organization studies, this is primarily in relation to being...
This paper examines the writing practices most often associated with French feminists called écritur...
Is there a difference between writing by men and that produced by women? What does that difference l...
A series of profound cleavages run through the history of writing - the fault lines opened by the so...
This article reexamines the treatment of gender and feminism in technical, business, and workplace w...
© The Author(s) 2018. This article critically reviews the use of non-conventional writing in organiz...
Purpose - This paper draws on concepts of ‘female masculinity’ to interrogate how hegemonic genderin...
The relationship between gender and discourse has been a focus of theoretical and empirical attentio...
Challenging yet extending extant efforts in organisation studies to disrupt the gender divide, we de...
This article focuses on the process of reading and its role in the construction of knowledge. Readin...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
This edited book inserts postfeminism (PF) as a critical concept into understandings of work and org...
The article demonstrates management discourse without masculine subtexts. In two organizations in th...