1st Edition

Gender and Communication at Work

Edited By Mary Barrett, Marilyn J. Davidson Copyright 2007

    Written by leading researchers from four continents, this book offers a broad and contemporary assessment of the ways in which gender affects workplace communication and how this in turn influences people’s choices, training, opportunities and career development. A range of work situations are considered (including communication within the normal routine, in a crisis or under pressure, and during those occasions important for career development) and examples are sourced from a variety of contexts (including international business, leadership, service work, and computer-mediated communication). Gender and Communication at Work includes a diversity of theoretical perspectives in order to most successfully map the range of communication strategies, identities and roles which impact upon and are influenced by gender at work.

    Chapter 1 Gender and Communication at Work: An Introduction, Mary Barrett, Marilyn J. Davidson; Part 1 Gender and Communication Situations in the Employment Lifespan; Chapter 2 Gendered Performance and Communication in the Employment Interview, Patrice M. Buzzanell, Rebecca J. Meisenbach; Chapter 3 The Effect of Gender on the Transfer of Interpersonal Communication Skills Training to the Workplace, Kathryn S. O’Neill, Carol D. Hansen, Gary L. May; Chapter 4 Women and Promotion: The Influence of Communication Style, Jennifer J. Peck; Part 2 Gender, Communication and Organizational Boundaries: Linkages and Violations; Chapter 5 Gender Issues in Workplace Groups: Effects of Gender and Communication Style on Social Influence, Linda L. Carli; Chapter 6 Gender and Advisor–Client Communication, Joan Mulholland; Chapter 7 Gender, Communication and International Business, Beverly D. Metcalfe; Chapter 8 Gender, Violation and Communication at Work, Jeff Hearn, Wendy Parkin; Part 3 Gender and Communication Channels in Special Workplace Environments; Chapter 9 Communication Channels and Gender Structures at Work, Catherine W. Ng, Laura Byra; Chapter 10 Women’s Work: The Language Use of Call Centre Representatives, Margaret Franken, Catherine Wallace; Chapter 11 Putting Gender in its Place: A Case Study on Constructing Speaker Identities in a Management Meeting, Judith Baxter; Chapter 12 Communication and Gender Issues in an Italian Medical Emergency Control Room: A Case Study, Isabella Paoletti; Part 4 Communicating to Get Things Done; Chapter 13 Gender, Leadership and Communication, Leonie V. Still; Chapter 14 ‘We Don’t Need Another Hero!’: Organizational Storytelling as a Vehicle for Communicating a Female Archetype of Workplace Leadership, Su Olsson; Chapter 15 Negotiating while Female: Research and Implications, Alice F. Stuhlmacher, Rebecca B. Winkler; Chapter 16 Gender and the Expression of Emotion in Organizations, Theresa A. Domagalski; Part 5 The Future: Gender and Computer-mediated Communication at Work; Chapter 17 Gender and Electronic Discourse in the Workplace, Rob Thomson; Chapter 18 The Email Gender Gap, Niki Panteli, Monica Seeley; Chapter 19 Gender and Diffusion of Email: An Organizational Perspective, Mark J. Brosnan; Chapter 20 Gender, Group Composition and Task Type in Virtual Groups, Victor Savicki, David A. Foster, Merle Kelley;

    Biography

    Mary Barrett is Professor of Management in the School of Management and Marketing, University of Wollongong, NSW, Australia. Her research and teaching interests are in the fields of human resource management, employment relations and general management, with special emphasis on gender issues in management, organizational communication, and family business, including women in family business. She has published over 60 academic articles and 6 books. Marilyn J. Davidson is Professor of Managerial Psychology in the Manchester Business School, The University of Manchester, UK. She is Head of the Occupational Psychology Group and Co-Director of the Centre for Diversity and Work Psychology. Her research and teaching interests are in the fields of occupational stress, the management of diversity, equal opportunities, women in management, ethnicity and female entrepreneurs. She has published over 150 academic articles and 19 books.

    ’This provocative volume includes chapters on language, gender and workplace discourse and will be an invaluable resource for academics and students. The chapters represent diverse theoretical approaches with topics ranging from electronic communication through sexual harassment to international business. This book will certainly stimulate further research.’ Professor Janet Holmes, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand ’This edited volume offers short, clearly written chapters that draw on the latest research. It will be useful for both researchers and students who are interested in how gender relations shape behaviour in organizations.’ Professor Joanne Martin, Stanford University, USA '...a new book that reveals that men and women adopt radically different styles in email messages' The Times 'All in all the book is a useful entry point into current research on gender and workplace communication.' Work, Employment & Society