Job crafting as dynamic displays of gender identities and meanings in male-dominated occupations
Job crafting as dynamic displays of gender identities and meanings in male-dominated occupations
In this article, we explore how women craft their jobs in male-dominated occupations in ways that respond to the job demands relating to contradictory gender expectations. With material from 21 interviews with female chefs working in professional kitchens, we show, through the lens of constructing gender identities and meanings at the gender-body nexus, that three job crafting practices—negotiating physical competence, reframing creativity, and managing men co-workers reactions—are invented as creative responses to gender-related job demands. The findings contribute to the job crafting literature by showing that women's job crafting in male-dominated occupations is less about increasing or decreasing certain types of job demands, but more about enacting “dynamic displays”—material, discursive, and fluid—of their gender identities and meanings as situated responses to a given job demand being made. Our research indicates the importance of understanding the conditions under which job crafting is mostly likely to generate positive, negative, or mixed experiences over time.
610-625
Yu, Ai
0c59d45f-7d68-4e4b-88a4-1333fe30a49d
Jyawali, Harishchandra
70638a7e-fe5e-4c42-9388-879ab50b733a
22 April 2021
Yu, Ai
0c59d45f-7d68-4e4b-88a4-1333fe30a49d
Jyawali, Harishchandra
70638a7e-fe5e-4c42-9388-879ab50b733a
Yu, Ai and Jyawali, Harishchandra
(2021)
Job crafting as dynamic displays of gender identities and meanings in male-dominated occupations.
Gender, Work & Organization, 28 (2), .
(doi:10.1111/gwao.12602).
Abstract
In this article, we explore how women craft their jobs in male-dominated occupations in ways that respond to the job demands relating to contradictory gender expectations. With material from 21 interviews with female chefs working in professional kitchens, we show, through the lens of constructing gender identities and meanings at the gender-body nexus, that three job crafting practices—negotiating physical competence, reframing creativity, and managing men co-workers reactions—are invented as creative responses to gender-related job demands. The findings contribute to the job crafting literature by showing that women's job crafting in male-dominated occupations is less about increasing or decreasing certain types of job demands, but more about enacting “dynamic displays”—material, discursive, and fluid—of their gender identities and meanings as situated responses to a given job demand being made. Our research indicates the importance of understanding the conditions under which job crafting is mostly likely to generate positive, negative, or mixed experiences over time.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 4 December 2020
Published date: 22 April 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 456140
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456140
ISSN: 0968-6673
PURE UUID: 7fb89cf7-b2cf-4b63-9a5b-1a70958c6cb5
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 26 Apr 2022 15:05
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 16:33
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Ai Yu
Author:
Harishchandra Jyawali
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics