性别、文化与企业沟通:日本和印度的跨文化研究

Nivedita Antyakula, D. Murthy
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摘要

正如在每一个社会背景下一样,即使在组织环境中,性别仍然具有特殊的意义。在男性主导的社会中,工作场所也是以男性为导向的,因为这种社会的性别刻板印象、信仰和假设在组织中得到加强。这种男性统治主要体现在组织结构(如等级制度)、组织活动(如组织为其男性员工赞助橄榄球比赛)、工作时间或组织语言(如组织期望女性合作和关心,而男性竞争、对抗和自信)中。此外,组织成员将这种取向内化为组织运作的正常或自然方式。因此,一个社会界定男子和妇女的作用和责任的方式显然影响到男子和妇女在工作场所及其职业状况中的作用。这就是为什么目前的研究以案例研究为方法论,认为女性所面临的社会文化挑战,如有限的权利、受限的自由和相当大的家庭责任,在工作场所也会得到复制,而且她们通常被置于等级金字塔的最底层,获得权威职位的机会很少。本研究试图分析日本和印度两家企业传播部门的文化对性别的影响。作者研究了日本神户制钢公司和印度RINL-VSP公司。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gender, Culture, and Corporate Communication: A Cross-Cultural Study of Japan and India
As in every social context, gender continues to hold a special significance even in the organizational environment. Workplaces in male-dominated societies are also male-oriented, as gender stereotypes, beliefs, and assumptions of such societies are reinforced in organizations. This domination of the male is embedded mostly within the organizational structure (e.g. hierarchy), organizational activity (e.g. the organization sponsors rugby tournaments for its male employees), working hours, or the organization's language (e.g. the organization expects women to be cooperative and caring and men to be competitive, confrontational, and assertive). Also, the members of the organization internalize this orientation as the normal or natural manner in which the organization functions. Thus, the manner in which a society defines the roles and responsibilities for its men and women clearly influences the roles of men and women in the workplace, and in their occupational situations as well. This is why the present research study, which uses case study as a methodology, argues that the socio-cultural challenges of women such as her limited rights, constrained freedom, and considerable duties at home gets replicated in the workplace as well and that they are often placed at the very bottom of the hierarchical pyramid providing minimal access to positions of authority. The present study makes an attempt to analyze the culture's influence on gender in the corporate communication departments of two organizations located in Japan and India. The authors study Kobe Steel, Ltd., Japan and RINL-VSP, India.
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