The feminist case against bureaucracy
Publication details: Temple University Press 1985 PhiladelphiaDescription: xviii, 286p. With indexISBN:- 9780877224006
- 303.35088042 K2F3
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book | Ahmedabad General Stacks | Non-fiction | 303.35088042 K2F3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 198691 |
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302.350722 H4 Historical organization studies: theory and applications | 302.350954 R3G8 Red tape: bureaucracy, structural violence and poverty in India | 302.54 N3N6 No!: the power of disagreement in a world that wants to get along | 303.35088042 K2F3 The feminist case against bureaucracy | 303.482 D7H4 A history of world order and resistance: the making and unmaking of global subjects | 303.620954 B2V4 Violent conjunctures in democratic India | 303.3 B7S8 States of injury: power and freedom in late modernity |
This book is both pessimistic and hopeful. With devastating thoroughness, the author shows how pervasive these patterns of relationship are in our work lives and personal lives, and how deep they run into the very language of the organization and of ordinary life.This is not a book about how women can succeed in business, but a criticism of books like those success manuals and notions like that idea of success. The author sees bureaucrats and clients as the "second sex." To fit in properly, they just learn the skills necessary to cope with subordinate status, skills that women have always learned as part of their "femininity."Liberal reforms placing more women in management positions, for example are not enough. What is required is the emergence of an alternative voice, one grounded in the experience and perceptions of women, that will challenge the patterns of control found in every aspect of modern life. Public discourse today is not the language of women even when women speak it.In this brilliant synthesis of the feminist literature and the literature on organizational theory and practice, the author suggests how a feminist discourse could interject into public debate a reformulation of the basic political questions of power, reason, and organization and thereby legitimate a concern of both autonomy and community. In the face of the massive incursions of bureaucracy into daily life, this is an important contribution to the project of human liberation.
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