Tensions of Making Women's Marginalization Salient in Men-Dominated Workplaces

Author:

Hart Chloe Grace1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

Abstract

Why might women who experience gender-based bias and harassment at work shy away from efforts to address gender inequality in their workplaces? Drawing on data from 52 interviews with women working in the Silicon Valley tech industry, I show that efforts to address women's marginalization in the men-dominated tech industry are complicated by the inscription of negative, gender essentialist stereotypes about women into narratives about why such initiatives are necessary. Interviewees voiced two rationales for not explicitly challenging women's marginalization. First, some women—particularly those whose race/ethnicity and age were typical of Silicon Valley tech workers—articulated a concern that such efforts may be interpreted as evidence that women are fundamentally different from, and deficient relative to, men. Second, women across race/ethnicity and age conveyed the concern that such efforts frame women as disempowered victims lacking agency. Both concerns represent a double bind: ignoring the marginalization that women face maintains a status quo rife with gender bias, but seeking to address it risks further entrenching negative stereotypes about women. These results illustrate both the durable nature of the gender status hierarchy and the unique ways that women of different intersecting identities confront it.

Funder

Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Stanford University

Stanford Graduate Research Opportunity Grant

Stanford Diversity Dissertation Research Opportunity Grant

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference70 articles.

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2. Escalator or Step Stool? Gendered Labor and Token Processes in Tech Work

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4. Alphabet Workers Union. (2023). We are a fighting union. Our union is building power for all Alphabet workers. https://www.alphabetworkersunion.org/

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