“我们是人渣,并以此为荣”:话语建构作为冒险工作者的身份

IF 1.4 Q2 COMMUNICATION
Kari J. Pink, Michael C. Coker, Emily A. Godager
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们谈论熟悉事物的方式塑造了我们是谁,话语影响了我们向世界展示自己的方式。通过语义建构,个体利用话语构建自己的首选身份。随着越来越多的美国工人寻求非传统就业,研究个人如何解释和构建主导的和长期存在的社会话语是不可或缺的。冒险工作者是一个典型的例子,他们与规范性话语保持一致,或者反对规范性话语,这些话语要么反映出他们对自己身份的看法,要么与之冲突。通过14次深入的半结构化访谈,我们发现了冒险工作者在规范性话语和冒险工作者身份之间经历的紧张关系。冒险工作者通过交流重新定义了理想的工作者规范和真实/虚假的自我二分法,围绕着一致的可用性、传统的成功衡量标准,以及为不满意的工作体验牺牲时间和自由。在这样做的过程中,我们的参与者创造了一种新的货币形式——经验——他们用它来使他们抵制和延续规范性话语的方式合法化。这一作品通过扩展“结晶自我”的概念和传统的“先工作后生活”的意识形态,阐明了宏观话语在意义建构和身份建构中的深远影响,为传播学做出了贡献。作者感谢威斯康星大学密尔沃基分校副教授Sarah E. riforate博士和三位匿名审稿人为本文的改进提供了有益的反馈。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。附加信息撰稿人说明kari J. PinkKari J. Pink(硕士,威斯康辛大学密尔沃基分校)在威斯康辛大学密尔沃基分校工作,担任高级通讯主任。她的工作生活沟通研究着眼于我们与组织的互动如何反映我们是谁,并影响我们成为谁。她的研究发表在《传播学》和《俄亥俄传播学杂志》上。迈克尔·科克博士Michael C. Coker(博士,威斯康星大学密尔沃基分校),美国爱达荷州博伊西州立大学传播系助理教授。他的研究兴趣涉及组织沟通和沟通技术之间的交叉点,包括物理和虚拟空间中未被充分研究的经验,工作与生活之间的交叉点,以及情感作为个人和专业背景下的组织特征。你可以在《管理传播季刊》、《人类行为中的计算机》和《传播研究》上找到他的作品。艾米丽A.戈达格博士Emily a . Godager(博士,威斯康星大学密尔沃基分校),美国威斯康辛州马奎特大学讲师。她的研究兴趣涉及组织沟通,包括工作与生活的交叉点、身份、组织社会化和组织变革。她的研究成果发表在《管理传播季刊》和《传播研究》上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“We’re Dirtbags and Proud of It”: Discursively Constructing Identity as an Adventure Worker
ABSTRACTHow we talk about things familiar to us shapes who we are, and discourses influence how we present ourselves to the world. Through sensemaking, individuals draw on discourses to construct their preferred identities. As an increasing number of American workers seek nontraditional employment, it is integral to examine how individuals interpret and frame dominant and longstanding societal discourses. Adventure workers are a prime example of individuals who align with or push against normative discourses that either reflect or conflict with how they envision their identities. Through 14 in-depth, semi-structured interviews, we discovered tensions adventure workers experience between normative discourses and the adventure worker identity. Adventure workers communicatively reframed ideal worker norms and the real/fake-self dichotomy surrounding consistent availability, conventional measures of success, and sacrificing time and freedom to unsatisfactory work experiences. In doing so, our participants generated a new form of currency – experience – which they used to legitimize the ways they both resisted and perpetuated normative discourses. This work contributes to communication scholarship by illuminating the far-reaching influence of macro discourses in sensemaking and identity construction by extending the notion of the crystallized self and the traditional “work now, life later” ideology.KEYWORDS: Work-life balanceadventure worksensemakingidentityideal worker AcknowledgmentsThe authors are grateful to the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Associate Professor Dr. Sarah E. Riforgiate and three anonymous reviewers for providing helpful feedback for improving this article.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationNotes on contributorsKari J. PinkKari J. Pink (MA, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) works at the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee as the Advancement Communications Director. Her work-life communication research looks at how our interactions with organizations reflect who we are and influence who we become. Her research has been published in Communication Studies and the Ohio Communication Journal.Michael C. CokerDr. Michael C. Coker (PhD, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Communication, Boise State University, Idaho, USA. His research interests relate to the intersections between organizational communication and communication technology, including understudied experiences in physical and virtual spaces, intersections between work and life, and emotions as organizing features across personal and professional contexts. You can find his work published in Management Communication Quarterly, Computers in Human Behavior, and Communication Studies.Emily A. GodagerDr. Emily A. Godager (PhD, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) is a lecturer at Marquette University, Wisconsin, USA. Her research interests relate to organizational communication, including the intersections of work and life, identity, organizational socialization, and organizational change. Her research has been published in Management Communication Quarterly and Communication Studies.
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来源期刊
Communication Studies
Communication Studies COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
6.20%
发文量
26
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