Dis/organising women’s freedom: feminist dialectical tensions in women’s business networks blogs
Dis/organising women’s freedom: feminist dialectical tensions in women’s business networks blogs
The growing popularity of women’s business networks (WBNs) is paralleled by a critique of their postfeminist character: by promoting individualist ideals in line with neoliberalism, WBNs are considered to disorganise rather than contribute to women’s freedom. To unpack this tension between the empirical phenomena and the feminist critique, we employ an inductive approach combining topic modeling, thematic coding and dialectical analysis to examine over 1,500 blog posts from four WBNs. We show how multiple discourses are circulated in the blogs and exist in tension with each other, and interpret the interstices for change and action that these tensions open. We thus contribute to understanding the ways to women’s freedom at the intersection of neoliberalism and postfeminism and extend the comprehension of how WBNs can contribute to this agenda. Furthermore, we make ancillary methodological contributions by using topic modeling in conjunction with other qualitative analysis tools and a large corpus of blog posts.
Villeseche, Florence
8da668cb-ab42-4212-a8b7-2675fd6d815b
Meliou, Elina
85901a05-3848-4490-962a-116488574d04
Jha, Harsh Kumar
82610a74-f9df-4ab9-9d48-b98c9ca61b2d
1 August 2021
Villeseche, Florence
8da668cb-ab42-4212-a8b7-2675fd6d815b
Meliou, Elina
85901a05-3848-4490-962a-116488574d04
Jha, Harsh Kumar
82610a74-f9df-4ab9-9d48-b98c9ca61b2d
Villeseche, Florence, Meliou, Elina and Jha, Harsh Kumar
(2021)
Dis/organising women’s freedom: feminist dialectical tensions in women’s business networks blogs.
Academy of Management Proceedings, 2021 (1).
(doi:10.5465/ambpp.2021.14797abstract).
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Meeting abstract
Abstract
The growing popularity of women’s business networks (WBNs) is paralleled by a critique of their postfeminist character: by promoting individualist ideals in line with neoliberalism, WBNs are considered to disorganise rather than contribute to women’s freedom. To unpack this tension between the empirical phenomena and the feminist critique, we employ an inductive approach combining topic modeling, thematic coding and dialectical analysis to examine over 1,500 blog posts from four WBNs. We show how multiple discourses are circulated in the blogs and exist in tension with each other, and interpret the interstices for change and action that these tensions open. We thus contribute to understanding the ways to women’s freedom at the intersection of neoliberalism and postfeminism and extend the comprehension of how WBNs can contribute to this agenda. Furthermore, we make ancillary methodological contributions by using topic modeling in conjunction with other qualitative analysis tools and a large corpus of blog posts.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 26 July 2021
Published date: 1 August 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500354
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500354
ISSN: 2151-6561
PURE UUID: fb79ef9f-8c8b-4bcc-b467-22f370cdf022
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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2025 16:33
Last modified: 29 Apr 2025 02:14
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Contributors
Author:
Florence Villeseche
Author:
Elina Meliou
Author:
Harsh Kumar Jha
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