“You can be the kind of woman that you are”: the discursive management of intersecting identities in leadership talk

Ember Corpuz, M. Augoustinos, Clemence Due
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Abstract

The present study investigates how culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD), and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) women mobilize intersecting identities through speeches delivered during women in leadership forums. As more women aspire to positions of leadership, the discursive analysis of identity management for understanding how identities are made relevant is critical. Using a discursive psychological approach, this research examines intersectionality as a social action, as it is played out in practice rather than as a theoretical concept. Here it is being anchored to empirical data to explore how it operates in the broader context of leadership talk, in particular, how diverse women represent themselves as leaders and what key identities emerge. The analysis demonstrates that in accounting for how these women achieved leadership positions, the speakers used their multiple identities as strategic resources. These identities included the categories of race, culture, gender, and parenthood. The insights from this study are significant as they shed light on the persisting barriers for women in achieving equal opportunity.
“你可以成为你想成为的那种女人”:领导力谈话中对交叉身份的话语管理
本研究调查了文化和语言多样性(CALD)、土著和托雷斯海峡岛民(ATSI)妇女如何通过在妇女领导论坛上的演讲来调动交叉身份。随着越来越多的女性渴望担任领导职务,对身份管理的话语分析对于理解身份如何变得相关是至关重要的。使用话语心理学方法,本研究将交叉性作为一种社会行为来研究,因为它在实践中发挥作用,而不是作为一个理论概念。在这里,它将以实证数据为基础,探索它如何在更广泛的领导力讨论背景下发挥作用,特别是女性如何以不同的方式表现自己作为领导者,以及出现了哪些关键身份。分析表明,在考虑这些女性如何获得领导职位时,演讲者将她们的多重身份作为战略资源。这些身份包括种族、文化、性别和父母身份。这项研究的见解很重要,因为它们揭示了女性在实现平等机会方面持续存在的障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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