Cultural advice

The Australian National University acknowledges, celebrates and pays our respects to the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people of the Canberra region and to all First Nations Australians on whose traditional lands we meet and work, and whose cultures are among the oldest continuing cultures in human history.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are advised that ANU Library collections may include images, names, voices, and other representations of deceased persons.

Material in the collection may contain terms, language or views that reflect the period in which the item was created and may be considered inappropriate today.

Writing through the labyrinth: Using l'ecriture feminine in leadership studies

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Lipton, Briony

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Abstract

Metaphors enable us to understand organisations in distinctive ways and explain the paucity of women in leadership positions, and yet, when gender discrimination is addressed via metaphor, women's responses, resistance and agency are rarely included in such analyses. In this article, I employ a narrative writing practice inspired by the work of Helene Cixous as a way of exploring how we might research and write differently in leadership studies. Cixous invites women to reclaim their sexuality and subjectivity through a feminine mode of women's writing and what she defines as l'ecriture feminine can be interpreted as a liberating bodily practice that aims to release women's repressed creative agency and transform phallogocentric structures. Using the Greek mythology of the Minotaur and the Labyrinth, this article weaves together these seemingly disparate concepts of myth, metaphor and feminist writing practices with leadership discourse to explore the ways in which academic women experience the university organisation as a labyrinth, how they navigate pathways to promotion and practice leadership. This creative analytic operates as a metanarrative that offers new ways of researching and writing leadership studies from the body, and reveals how myths continue to influence present experiences and structures in unexpected ways.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Leadership

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2040-01-01