Feminism in women’s business networks: a freedom-centred perspective
Feminism in women’s business networks: a freedom-centred perspective
How do women’s business networks help to advance women’s freedom? Drawing on Zerilli’s freedom-centred feminism, our study sets out to answer this question at the intersection of freedom, feminism and work. Critics argue that women’s business networks promote a postfeminist view of freedom focusing on individual self-realisation and thus participate in rolling back collective, feminist efforts to dismantle structural inequalities. We reconceptualise women’s business networks as political arenas and argue that making claims about shared interests and concerns in such an arena constitutes a feminist practice of freedom. With an original, inductive and qualitative research design combining topic modeling and dialectical analysis, we examine the claims made in 1529 posts across four women’s business network blogs. We identify postfeminist claims and new forms of change and transformation that can help to advance women’s freedom across three ‘dialectics of freedom’: conformity and imagination; performative care and relational care; sameness and openness. Our findings show that uncertain and contradictory ways of defining and engaging with women’s freedom can emerge through claim-making in such arenas. The fragility of the process and its outcomes are, then, what can move feminism forward at work and beyond.
1903-1927
Villeseche, Florence
8da668cb-ab42-4212-a8b7-2675fd6d815b
Meliou, Elina
85901a05-3848-4490-962a-116488574d04
Jha, Harsh Kumar
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October 2022
Villeseche, Florence
8da668cb-ab42-4212-a8b7-2675fd6d815b
Meliou, Elina
85901a05-3848-4490-962a-116488574d04
Jha, Harsh Kumar
cf2ed3b5-b3c7-4dce-beb0-f6b56965fc26
Villeseche, Florence, Meliou, Elina and Jha, Harsh Kumar
(2022)
Feminism in women’s business networks: a freedom-centred perspective.
Human Relations, 75 (10), .
(doi:10.1177/00187267221083665).
Abstract
How do women’s business networks help to advance women’s freedom? Drawing on Zerilli’s freedom-centred feminism, our study sets out to answer this question at the intersection of freedom, feminism and work. Critics argue that women’s business networks promote a postfeminist view of freedom focusing on individual self-realisation and thus participate in rolling back collective, feminist efforts to dismantle structural inequalities. We reconceptualise women’s business networks as political arenas and argue that making claims about shared interests and concerns in such an arena constitutes a feminist practice of freedom. With an original, inductive and qualitative research design combining topic modeling and dialectical analysis, we examine the claims made in 1529 posts across four women’s business network blogs. We identify postfeminist claims and new forms of change and transformation that can help to advance women’s freedom across three ‘dialectics of freedom’: conformity and imagination; performative care and relational care; sameness and openness. Our findings show that uncertain and contradictory ways of defining and engaging with women’s freedom can emerge through claim-making in such arenas. The fragility of the process and its outcomes are, then, what can move feminism forward at work and beyond.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 February 2022
Published date: October 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500349
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500349
ISSN: 0018-7267
PURE UUID: caf36de8-070f-49d4-adfe-ba55185742d5
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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2025 16:30
Last modified: 29 Apr 2025 02:14
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Author:
Florence Villeseche
Author:
Elina Meliou
Author:
Harsh Kumar Jha
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