Engineering Emotion Sustainably: Affective Gendered Organizing of Engineering Identities and Third Space
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Literature Review
1.1.1. Women in Engineering
1.1.2. Emotions and Affective Gendered Organizing
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedures
3. Results
3.1. Women’s Feelings of (Un)Belongingness and (In)Visibility
3.1.1. Feelings of Difference-Exclusion
“It was more traumatic for the people I worked for than for me…I walk into the lab and they’re like ‘What do we do with you?’ (laugh) They’re like ‘We can’t talk about the same things we talk about ‘cause you’re here.’”
“Actually this past summer I had a supervisor that, right before I got there, had actually, he’d been in a group of people and they were all males but, he just happened to talk about how he didn’t think females should be engineers. And he was my supervisor all summer.”
3.1.2. Feelings of Being Invisible and Visible
“I started asking him [professor] my first question…but evidently my question wasn’t profound enough and so he kicked me out of his office hours and didn’t give me any help…He’s like ‘We’re done here’ and he got up, he ushered me out of his office.”
“It’s really frustrating…people look at, you know, being the slutty female as such a negative thing to show your female figure your, you know, female characteristics about maybe being sensitive or being emotional or being passionate about something and, and at the same, you know, you just don’t wanna show those aspects that are tied to being female and weak.”
“The relationship with those guys [in class] is kind of weird…if you try to be their friend or partner, they would always in the end take it as you want them…I think I didn’t have that group of guys to work with, I think it really hurt me for that class, whereas I knew they were working together, but I never felt a part of it. Whenever I went to talk to them, they just decided I was stupid or I didn’t know what was going on enough to help me out.” (Suzy)
3.2. Men’s Emotional Labor to Voice Inclusion but Enact Exclusion
3.2.1. Men’s Feelings of Elitism and Exclusion
“I think that the son going out and doing firewood, or maybe he’s working on the car with his dad, is going to develop more engineering skills, and I think he’s going to be a natural like, just a better engineer to start with, and I think he’s going to be more driven to that kind of goal; where maybe the girl isn’t going to be as naturally driven towards engineering.”
“I’m going to sound really sexist, I’m sure, but I think that in general, they’re more concerned with more tangible things, you know, relationships and more visual and aesthetics, so I think that engineering fields where they can kind of put that into use, I think there’s definitely room to kind of market those more for women engineers.”
“I think it is a fact that women don’t realize that there are lot of things that they want to do that they can do going into engineering disciplines. They just feel they want to take the easier way to get to their goal. Maybe because they feel engineering is harder, you know.”
“I think that we have to embrace that there are less women in engineering and that’s fine. It’s not to say that women can’t be engineers or they’re going to be inferior engineers; I just think we need to be honest with them and say ‘Hey, there are less of you guys, but you have all the opportunities in the world. There are all kinds of programs for you.’”
“I think it may be possible that you need to get the idea of saying that engineering is an option to women, but I don’t think we need more women. I think it’s just more like if a woman is interested, they should have every equal opportunity to join.”
3.2.2. Feelings That Increasing the Number of Women Engineers Is Harmful to Engineering
“Ohhh. I don’t know that that should be the interest of engineering. I think everyone should find out what their passion is, and pursue that…That’s the kind of people you want in jobs. If they have a passion for the work they’re gonna do good. They don’t really need too much other incentive. I don’t need this bonus that’s going to come about. I don’t need, I don’t know, it’s just if you love doing it, you’ll do it.”
“I don’t think they need to really recruit more. I think it’s fine. I mean, they always say that there should be more women in engineering or chemical engineering, but I honestly think that actually there are starting to become more women in there, and I don’t know if they recruited or not, so…But honestly, I don’t think so because a lot of people I’m in class with, women and men, they all have a natural, like wanting to learn these things. There isn’t necessarily like a woman was forced here because there weren’t many women here to start with. I think they all naturally do it themselves.”
“That’s kind of an interesting point just because like do they want to be treated equally or do they not want to be treated equally? That’s the big thing I’ve always kind of struggled with because it seems like sometimes they’re always, you know, fighting for equal rights, but at the same time, I don’t think they should have equal rights. That’s a personal thing, but I think that we should maybe embrace that they are different, you know?”
“I mean I think outreach events are great, but I guess there’s a line where you start trying to make, really convince people to become engineers instead of just present them information about what engineers do and get them interested in it.”
“Right now my personal experiences are, from undergrad, there are a lot of people that I saw in these STEM technologies that probably shouldn’t have been…you know, in the university, usually the criteria for women is a little lower than men, to help get more women into the field; but I feel like they’ve already gone past that and they need to bring it back up so it’s [the criteria] about even.”
“Do you really want those people who are not really, otherwise, going to be best suited for this kind of field to be in the field? Because, sure you can have a lot of people, but I think quality is more important that quantity. So if they’re [women] not interested, maybe they shouldn’t be in it in the first place.”
3.3. Feminist Third Spaces/Places for Collective Emotional Labor and Resilience
3.3.1. Women’s Individual Strategies
“There was a natural aptitude that I showed early on. Subsequent to my third birthday, a couple of months thereafter, I had gotten a tricycle as a holiday gift…I put it together and took it to the neighbors to tighten the bolts. So I was able to effectively assemble my tricycle correctly at slightly over three years old…as I aged, I was the girl who played with the trucks and took the bikes apart. It wasn’t weird to me. It was just how I was.”
“I was three. I knew the routines from class, but I didn’t dance a step, but when it was over I told her (my mother) how the curtain worked! I was all excited about the pulleys and the rope. She knew I would be an engineer.”
“He’s very old school.…He’s just kind of a goofball I guess, and so I don’t take it that seriously, I think there’s some females in the classes that were definitely offended by it. I just kind of brushed it off and took a “prove him wrong later” type of attitude.”
“I’d done it as a favor kind of out of the goodness of my heart to help them, and it was infuriating. I was fuming for like three days…the way that I was able to just let that go is…I knew I’d done a good job. I knew I had helped them meet their goal. That was the important part, you know, not who got credit.”
“If a woman has that engineering arrogance, she’s seen as not a nice person, and that holds her back but if she’s a nice person and a team player she’s not recognized for her efforts.”
3.3.2. Collective Design of a Feminist Third Space/Place
“(Members would say) ‘I’ve done this,’ ‘We’re going to do this,’ ‘I’ve had this experience,’ ‘I’ve had that experience,’ ‘Don’t worry about it, I’m going to come with you.’ ‘Let’s go talk to this person.’ ‘This is how you should phrase your email. If this is what you want to ask, this is what you really want to know.’…so that’s what SWE was about for me, that was my professional support system.”
Likewise, the WIE Director boosted members’ confidence. Kim said,
“The [retired] Women in Engineering director was just exactly what a girl in engineering needs. You walk into the office and she goes “Keep going! You’re doing great.” She’ll just tell you what you want to hear to keep you motivated.”
“In all reality, being a woman engineer is an advantage because there is such a strong network with the Women in Engineering program and with SWE. The guys are left to their own devices to figure it out whereas we’ve got that little extra support.”
“(We) were all going through the same thing so when you’re sitting there and you’re literally getting ready to put your foot through your computer screen, you know, there’s someone next door who’s getting ready to put their foot through their computer screen. So you can help each other.”
“And maybe if someone brings in their dad that’s an engineer it’s like “alright, a guy’s doing that”. But girls really don’t think about it until it’s somebody’s mom that’s an engineer [who] comes in or [is] a math teacher or science teacher.”
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
- UNESCO Institute of Statistics. Women in Science. 2017. Available online: http://uis.unesco.org/sites/default/files/documents/fs43-women-in-science-2017-en.pdf (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- Women’s Engineering Society (WES). 2022. Available online: https://www.wes.org.uk (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- National Science Board. The State of U.S. Science and Engineering 2022; National Science Foundation: Alexandria, VA, USA, 2022. Available online: https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsb20221 (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- Rincon, R.; A Closer Look at the Data. 23 August 2021. Available online: https://magazine.swe.org/data-higher-education-enrollments-fall-2021/ (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- Valian, V. Why So Slow? The Advancement of Women; MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, USA, 1999. [Google Scholar]
- Kisselburgh, L.; Berkelaar Van Pelt, B.; Buzzanell, P.M. Discourse, gender, and the meanings of work: Rearticulating science, technology, and engineering careers through communicative lenses. Ann. Int. Commun. Assoc. 2009, 33, 258–299. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Alvesson, M.; Kärreman, D. Varieties of discourse: On the study of organizations through discourse analysis. Hum. Relat. 2000, 53, 1125–1149. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Eddington, S.; Corple, D.; Buzzanell, P.M.; Zoltowski, C.B.; Brightman, A. Addressing organizational cultural conflicts in engineering with Design Thinking. Negot. Confl. Manag. Res. 2020, 13, 263–284. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Faulkner, W. Nuts and bolts and people’ gender-troubled engineering identities. Soc. Stud. Sci. 2007, 37, 331–356. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lönngren, J.; Adawi, T.; Berge, M.; Huff, J.; Murzi, H.; Direito, I.; Tormey, R.; Sultan, U. Emotions in engineering education: Towards a research agenda. In Proceedings of the 2020 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), Uppsala, Sweden, 21–24 October 2020; pp. 1–5. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Serebrenik, A. Emotional labor of software engineers. In Proceedings of the 16th Edition of the BElgian-NEtherlands Software EVOLution Symposium (BENEVOL 2017), Antwerp, Belgium, 4–5 December 2017; pp. 1–6. Available online: https://pure.tue.nl/ws/portalfiles/portal/90786766/sereemot2017.pdf (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- Stewart, K. Ordinary Affects; Duke University Press: Durham, NC, USA, 2007. [Google Scholar]
- Eddington, S.; Jarvis, C.; Buzzanell, P.M. Constituting affective identities: Understanding the communicative construction of identity in online men’s rights spaces. Organization 2023, 30, 116–139. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- National Academies; National Academy of Sciences; National Academy of Engineering; Institute of Medicine of the National Academies. Beyond Bias and Barriers: Fulfilling the Potential of Women in Academic Science and Engineering; National Academies Press: Washington, DC, USA, 2006. [Google Scholar]
- Cheryan, S.; Ziegler, S.; Montoya, A.; Jiang, L. Why are some STEM fields more gender balanced than others? Psychol. Bull. 2017, 143, 1–35. Available online: https://psycnet.apa.org/buy/2016-48466-001 (accessed on 30 January 2023). [CrossRef]
- Wang, M.T.; Degol, J. Gender gap in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM): Current knowledge, implications for practice, policy, and future directions. Educ. Psychol. Rev. 2017, 29, 119–140. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Inkson, K.; Dries, N.; Arnold, J. Understanding Careers, 2nd ed.; SAGE: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2016. [Google Scholar]
- Faulkner, W. Doing gender in engineering workplace cultures. I. Observations from the field. Eng. Stud. 2009, 1, 3–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- de Pillis, E.; de Pillis, L. Are engineering schools masculine and authoritarian? The mission statements say yes. J. Divers. High. Educ. 2008, 1, 33–44. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Cheryan, S. Understanding the paradox in math-related fields: Why do some gender gaps remain while others do not? Sex Roles 2012, 66, 184–190. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shapiro, J.R.; Williams, A.M. The role of stereotype threats in undermining girls’ and women’s performance and interest in STEM fields. Sex Roles A J. Res. 2012, 66, 175–183. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bandura, A. Self Efficacy: The Exercise of Control; Freeman: Dallas, TX, USA, 1997. [Google Scholar]
- Tellhed, U.; Bäckström, M.; Björklund, F. Will I fit in and do well? The importance of social belongingness and self-efficacy for explaining gender differences in interest in STEM and HEED majors. Sex Roles 2017, 77, 86–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Jorgensen, J. Engineering selves: Negotiating gender and identity in technical work. Manag. Commun. Q. 2002, 15, 350–381. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Buzzanell, P.M.; Long, Z.; Kokini, K.; Anderson, L.; Batra, J. Mentoring in academe: A feminist poststructural lens on stories of women engineering faculty of color. Manag. Commun. Q. 2015, 29, 440–457. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gettings, P.E.; Dorrance Hall, E.D. Exploring the career resilience processes of women in the early stages of traditionally male careers. West. J. Commun. 2022, 1–25. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dorrance Hall, E.; Gettings, P.E. “Who is this little girl they hired to work here?”: Women’s experiences of marginalizing communication in male-dominated workplaces. Commun. Monogr. 2020, 87, 484–505. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dutta, D. Communicating resilience in actual and imagined boundaries: Narrative plots and meanings of retention in organizations. J. Appl. Commun. Res. 2019, 47, 401–419. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Leaper, C. Do I belong?: Gender, peer groups, and STEM achievement. Int. J. Gend. Sci. Technol. 2015, 7, 166–179. Available online: https://genderandset.open.ac.uk/index.php/genderandset/article/view/405 (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- Mendez, S.; Watson, K.; Conley, V. Sacrifice: Messages STEM postdoctoral scholar women receive about career and family. In Proceedings of the 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN, USA, 26–29 June 2022; American Society of Engineering Education: Washington, DC, USA, 2022. [Google Scholar]
- Thébaud, S.; Taylor, C.J. The specter of motherhood: Culture and the production of gendered career aspirations in science and engineering. Gend. Soc. 2021, 35, 395–421. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Miller, K.I.; Considine, J.; Garner, J. “Let me tell you about my job”: Exploring the terrain of emotion in the workplace. Manag. Commun. Q. 2007, 20, 231–260. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Riforgiate, S.E.; Howes, S.S.; Simmons, M.J. The impact of daily emotional labor on health and well-being. Manag. Commun. Q. 2022, 36, 391–417. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kim, M.; Williams, E.A. Emotional sustainability in human services organizations: Cultural and communicative paths to dealing with emotional work. Sustainability 2022, 14, 15470. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Powers, S.; Gazica, M.; Myers, K.K. Emotional communication and human sustainability in professional service firms (PSFs). Sustainability 2022, 14, 4054. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Villamil, A.M.; D’Enbeau, S. Essential work in the US during COVID-19: Navigating vulnerability–sustainability tensions. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10665. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wang, P.C. The ‘desired state of mind’: Emotional labor and the hidden cost of symbolic power in 911 emergency response in the US. Ethnography 2022, 14661381221145353. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Just, S.N. An assemblage of avatars: Digital organization as affective intensification in the GamerGate controversy. Organization 2019, 26, 716–738. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Ashcraft, K.L. Communication as constitutive transmission? An encounter with affect. Commun. Theory 2021, 31, 571–592. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mease, J.; Branton, S. Considerations and orientations for the analysis of materiality and affect in qualitative organizational communication research. In The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research in Organizational Communication; Brummans, B.H.J.M., Taylor, B., Sivunen, A., Eds.; SAGE: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2017. [Google Scholar]
- Lulham, R.; Shank, D.B. How “Stuff” Matters in Affect Control Theory. Am. Behav. Sci. 2022, 67, 000276422110660. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Charmaz, K. The power of constructivist grounded theory for critical inquiry. Qual. Inq. 2017, 23, 34–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Huber, G. Putting humour to work: To make sense of and constitute organizations. Int. J. Manag. Rev. 2022, 24, 535–554. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hardtke, M.; Khanjaninejad, L.; Lang, C.; Nasiri, N. Gender complexity and experience of women undergraduate students within the engineering domain. Sustainability 2023, 15, 467. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Oldenburg, R. The Great Good Place: Cafes, Coffee Shops, Bookstores, Bars, Hair Salons and Other Hangouts at the Heart of a Community, 2nd ed.; Marlowe: London, UK, 1997. [Google Scholar]
- Pauly, J.A. “Sister spirit”: A case study on feminist religious organizing. West. J. Commun. 2022, 1–22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Korczynski, M. Communities of coping: Collective emotional labour in service work. Organization 2003, 10, 55–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Okamoto, K.E. As resilient as an ironweed: Narrative resilience in nonprofit organizing. J. Appl. Commun. Res. 2020, 48, 618–636. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Buzzanell, P.M. Organizing resilience as adaptive-transformational tensions. J. Appl. Commun. Res. 2018, 46, 14–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Buzzanell, P.M. Feminist co-mentoring for resilience: Institutionalizing micro-macro strategies for adaptation and transformation. In Feminist Mentoring in Academia; Pauly, J., Hernández, L., Munz, S., Eds.; Lexington: Greenwich, CT, USA, 2023; forthcoming. [Google Scholar]
- Ferreira, J.; Ferreira, C.; Bos, E. Spaces of consumption, connection, and community: Exploring the role of the coffee shop in urban lives. Geoforum 2021, 119, 21–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Buzzanell, P.M. Designing feminist resilience. In Reflections on Feminist Communication and Media Scholarship: Theory, Method, Impact; Eckert, S., Bachmann, I., Eds.; Routledge: Oxfordshire, UK, 2021; pp. 43–58. [Google Scholar]
- Htun, M.; Mehdiabadi, A.; Moschella-Smith, E. Reducing gender-based harassment in engineering: Opportunities and obstacles to bystander intervention. In Proceedings of the 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN, USA, 25–29 June 2022; Available online: https://www.asee.org/ (accessed on 30 January 2023).
- National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Sexual Harassment of Women: Climate, Culture, and Consequences in Academic Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; The National Academies Press: Washington, DC, USA, 2018. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tian, Z.; Bush, H. Half the sky: Interwoven resilience processes of women political leaders in China. J. Appl. Commun. Res. 2020, 48, 70–90. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chakraverty, D. Impostor phenomenon and identity-based microaggression among Hispanic/Latinx individuals in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics: A qualitative exploration. Violence Gend. 2022, 9, 135–141. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Makki, N.; Willits, R.; Stone, T.; Cutright, T.; Williams, L.; Coats, L.; Rodrigues, D. Preparation of female and minority PhD and Post-Docs for careers in engineering academia (experience). In Proceedings of the 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN, USA, 26–29 June 2022; American Society of Engineering Education: Washington, DC, USA, 2022. [Google Scholar]
- Haynes-Baratz, M.; Metinyurt, T.; Li, Y.; Gonzales, J.; Bond, M. Bystander training for faculty: A promising approach to tackling microaggressions in the academy. New Ideas Psychol. 2021, 63, 100882. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tracy, S.J.; Rivera, K. Endorsing equity and applauding stay-at-home moms: How male voices on work-life reveal aversive sexism and flickers of transformation. Manag. Commun. Q. 2010, 24, 3–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lau, V.; Scott, V.; Warren, M.; Bligh, M.C. Moving from problems to solutions: A review of gender equality interventions at work using an ecological systems approach. J. Organ. Behav. 2023, 44, 399–419. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- National Academy of Engineering. Changing the Conversation: Messages for Improving Public Understanding of Engineering; National Academies Press: Washington, DC, USA, 2008. [Google Scholar]
- Putnam, L.L. Unpacking the dialectic: Alternative views on the discourse–materiality relationship. J. Manag. Stud. 2015, 52, 706–716. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Putnam, L.L.; Fairhurst, G.T.; Banghart, S. Contradictions, dialectics, and paradoxes in organizations: A constitutive approach. Acad. Manag. Ann. 2016, 10, 65–171. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sparr, J.L.; Miron-Spektor, E.; Lewis, M.W.; Smith, W.K. From a label to a metatheory of paradox: If we change the way we look at things, the things we look at change. Acad. Manag. Collect. 2022, 1, 16–34. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Buzzanell, P.M.; Arendt, C.; Dohrman, R.L.; Zoltowski, C.B.; Rajan, P. Engineering Emotion Sustainably: Affective Gendered Organizing of Engineering Identities and Third Space. Sustainability 2023, 15, 5051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065051
Buzzanell PM, Arendt C, Dohrman RL, Zoltowski CB, Rajan P. Engineering Emotion Sustainably: Affective Gendered Organizing of Engineering Identities and Third Space. Sustainability. 2023; 15(6):5051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065051
Chicago/Turabian StyleBuzzanell, Patrice M., Colleen Arendt, Rebecca L. Dohrman, Carla B. Zoltowski, and Prashant Rajan. 2023. "Engineering Emotion Sustainably: Affective Gendered Organizing of Engineering Identities and Third Space" Sustainability 15, no. 6: 5051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065051
APA StyleBuzzanell, P. M., Arendt, C., Dohrman, R. L., Zoltowski, C. B., & Rajan, P. (2023). Engineering Emotion Sustainably: Affective Gendered Organizing of Engineering Identities and Third Space. Sustainability, 15(6), 5051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065051