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Call for Abstracts: Gender as a Social Practice - Extended Deadline!

  • 1.  Call for Abstracts: Gender as a Social Practice - Extended Deadline!

    Posted 11-03-2006 05:32
    Extended Deadline: November 20, 2006


    Gender, Work and Organization
    5th international interdisciplinary conference, 27th–29th June 2007
    Keele, Staffordshire, UK

    Call for Abstracts:
    Gender as a Social Practice

    Stream Convenors:
    Attila Bruni, University of Trento, Italy
    Elisabeth Kelan, London Business School, UK
    Julia Nentwich, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
    Barbara Poggio, University of Trento, Italy

    For researchers on gender and organisations, seeing gender as a social
    process may seem as yesterday’s news. However, the essentialist conception
    of “men” and “women” as biological or characteristics within the person
    have only recently (and not always) been superseded by constructionist
    ideas. The constant redefining and negotiating of gender and its meanings
    in everyday practices has become one of the major foci of research on
    gender in organisations. Although “gender as a social practice” has been
    researched widely and Gender, Work and Organization has already published
    a special issue on “theorizing gender as practice” (Vol. 13, issue 6,
    2006), and also the term “doing gender” is cited abundantly in
    publications, there are still many open questions when both theorising the
    “doing” of gender and studying it empirically.

    There are broadly two different bodies of theory treating gender as a
    social process. Firstly, the sociological tradition developed by
    ethnomethodological and interactionist approaches. Here doing gender is
    conceptualised as a routine accomplishment in social (and organizational)
    interactions. Empirical work focuses on everyday practices, showing how
    gender is created and re-created in situated activities. The second theory
    derives from feminist debate and, in particular, Judith Butler’s work.
    Drawing mainly on poststructural theories, she develops a critical
    genealogy of gender categories in which she explores why gender is
    perceived as something stable even though it has to be enacted in specific
    and different situations. A central concept here is that of
    “performativity”: Butler sees performing as a “doing” in the sense that it
    constitutes a “being” that constructs a specific subject position.
    Empirically, studies try to deconstruct the gender practices underlying
    social interactions, focusing on the discourses drawn upon when
    constructing a gendered identity.

    Both approaches conceptualise gender as an ongoing activity or a ‘doing’
    within everyday life. Organisational researchers have been at the
    forefront of adopting such ‘doing gender’ concepts and developing them
    further for research on gender at work. However, the “theory of practice”
    Connell demanded (1987:61) to get a “grip on the interweaving of personal
    life and social structure” has not yet been elaborated. Moreover, it would
    be important to reflect on the empirical and methodological implications
    of the ‘practice turn’ in gender research. If gender is conceptualised as
    something fluid and flexible, research practices have to be able to grasp
    the processuality and complexity of the different organizational dynamics
    and subjectivities.

    In order to continue the debate on gender as a social practice, in this
    stream we would like to discuss three interwoven themes. Firstly, on which
    new approaches can researchers draw to study gender as a social process?
    Secondly, how has gender as a social practice been researched empirically?
    And thirdly, what new methods and suggestions could be applied to studying
    it? In order to explore some of these issues we welcome theoretical and
    empirical contributions seeking to look at gender as a social practice.
    The stream is intended to provide a forum for debating gender as a social
    practice in research on organisations and to put forward the idea that
    doing gender (and doing it differently) is also a matter of organizational
    practices. Papers may address, but are not restricted to, the following
    questions:

    · Is ‘doing gender’ just a trendy term or does it help to theorise
    gender in alternative ways?
    · How similar or different are the theoretical traditions and
    concepts drawn upon in organisational research?
    · What could be empirical examples for gender as a social process?
    · What aspects and processes are investigated when gender as a
    social process is studied?
    · What are the methodological implications of studying gender a
    social practice for organizational theory and
    · research?
    · What methods and techniques can be used to research gender as a
    social practice?
    · How do gender practices influence research processes?
    · Is it possible to ‘un-do gender’ in organization? How? Would that
    be a solution?

    Abstracts should be one page, single space and of approximately 500 words
    (excluding any references) giving title of paper, keywords, contact
    details including your name, institutional affiliation, mailing address,
    telephone number and e-mail address. Submission date for abstracts is 20th
    November 2006. All abstracts will be peer reviewed. Please not that due to
    restrictions of space, multiple submissions by the same author will not be
    timetabled. New and young scholars with ‘work in progress’ papers are
    welcomed. Email your abstract to Julia Nentwich julia.nentwich@unisg.ch
    State the title of the stream to which you are submitting your abstract.