Thinking the multiple in gender and diversity studies: examining the concept of intersectionality
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the concept of intersectionality. In recent management writing, a vocabulary has been introduced which enacts concepts such as assemblages, multiplicity, rhizomes, and becoming. Such a vocabulary is helpful when revising the theoretical models used in gender research.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing on this fluid mode of thinking, which is fundamentally indebted to a process thinking that favours becoming and change over stability and fixed entities as the primary analytical categories, the concept of intersectionality is discussed.
Findings
It is suggested that intersectionality perspectives, a concept developed to enable the analysis of co‐existing and co‐operating registers of knowledge and power, may inform gender and diversity studies and organization theory in general. Rather than reducing all sorts of identities or subject‐positions to a single plane, intersectionality perspectives conceive of identity as being derived from different registers functioning as shifting planes, at times operating detachedly from one another; in other cases directly overlapping and even clashing.
Practical implications
Intersectionality thinking is capable of influencing a variety of organizational and managerial practices.
Originality/value
The paper seeks to bridge process thinking, gender theory, and diversity management literature through introducing the concept of intersectionality as a helpful tool when thinking of organizational practice.
Keywords
Citation
Styhre, A. and Eriksson‐Zetterquist, U. (2008), "Thinking the multiple in gender and diversity studies: examining the concept of intersectionality", Gender in Management, Vol. 23 No. 8, pp. 567-582. https://doi.org/10.1108/17542410810912690
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2008, Emerald Group Publishing Limited