[Xmca-l] Collaboration
Christopher Schuck
schuckthemonkey@gmail.com
Wed Apr 20 21:19:02 PDT 2016
I'll try to be brief :). One of the nice things about replying to a
listserve is that we don't have to worry about interrupting each other's
sentences - even if I might still worry about horning in on someone else's
conversation prematurely, or going on too long!
Written communication is often criticized for its limitations and
face-to-face communication favorably regarded as more organic, but as this
last thread illustrates the latter can be uniquely sensitive to certain
kinds of oppressive cultural norms. There is maybe a certain
"psychological safety" in the written word even though it might detract
from collaboration in other ways. I wonder to what degree these gender
dynamics remain the same in written exchanges and to what degree they are
modified, either for worse or better...
On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 7:40 PM, HENRY SHONERD <hshonerd@gmail.com
<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','hshonerd@gmail.com');>> wrote:
> Hi Annalisa,
> I would also love to hear from the women.
>
> And you don’t ruin things for me at all. I am frankly very appreciative
> you would respond to my post and with such good data, if you will. My
> little summary of Tannen didn’t do justice to the diversity and complexity
> of the many kinds of discourse. The book I cited is focused on gender and a
> certain kind of discourse: conversation. Two other popular books of hers
> focus on gender: You Just Don’t Understand Me: Men and Women in
> Conversation (1990) and Talking From 9 to 5: How Women’s and Men’s
> Conversational Styles Affect Who Gets Heard, Who Gets Credit and What Gets
> Done at Work (1994). An even earlier book, That’s Not What I Meant: How
> Conversational Style Makes or Breaks Your Relations with Others (1986),
> gets into more broadly “cultural” differences in styles of engaging in
> dialog.
>
> But even if Tannen sticks to day-to-day conversation among middle America,
> I think your own experiences and the narratives of women in public
> discourse that you cite are evidence that her analysis of conversational
> style in this country informs us about political, academic and legal
> discourse around the world. An irony from Tannen’s work is that men
> complain that women interrupt more often, but the reality is to the
> contrary: Men interrupt women much more often. Tannen found that women in
> talking with one another tend not to interpret simultaneous talk as
> interruptions, but as agreement, solidarity, she calls it. Men tend to
> interpret simultaneous talk as an affront. One can talk here about
> multi-tasking: Maybe men are just not as good as women at talking and
> listening at the same time and that hurts their pride. Chromosomal? I doubt
> it, but I am still constantly chagrined by my wife’s ability to talk and
> listen at the same time. Hell, I would settle for just being a better
> listener! That’s not easy for me!! On this chat some of it is simple
> ignorance on my part about what is being talked about, academic preparation
> if you will. But I am pretty sure some of it has to do with a tin ear and a
> less-than-open heart. Still, got to work with what I’ve got.
>
> With respect,
> Henry
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Apr 20, 2016, at 4:02 PM, Annalisa Aguilar <annalisa@unm.edu
> <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','annalisa@unm.edu');>> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Henry,
> >
> > Hate to ruin things for you, but I must not fit in the general gendered
> paradigm of interruptions. Or maybe I am not understanding you correctly?
> >
> > Being a woman who is frequently not allowed to speak to the end of my
> sentences, which causes a situation where I must repeat myself –which
> subsequently makes me appear as long-winded compared to if I'd just been
> able to finish my sentence in the first place– I feel interruptions are
> most always about power dynamics, as I almost always feel unheard when my
> speech is interrupted. It is the exception that I feel interruptions make
> me feel I am heard by my interlocutor(s), where as you say the conversation
> is being moved along.
> >
> > There is also the pattern where people might allow me to speak to the
> end of my sentence and then continue one as if I had said nothing, in that
> case it is the shape of an interruption whereby I am made out to be the
> unwelcome interrupter, and thus ignored.
> >
> > In both cases these are two sorts of speech censorship, which does not
> contribute to a sense of psychological safety.
> >
> > I was listening to NPR yesterday and learned that in Iran there is an
> expansion of the secret police monitoring whether or not women are wearing
> their public hijab properly, and (bless them) Iranian women are coming
> forward on Twitter having that network moment of not taking it anymore. One
> woman who is a parliamentary journalist, was not allowed to ask her
> questions because of criticisms of her hijab presentation. So here is a
> case of interruption based upon appearance, rather than allowing her speech
> to be spontaneously given and received.
> >
> > I remember thinking after I heard the news story, that women seem to
> frequently have to resort to a "forced" flexibility, a sort of temporal
> bricolage, to make their thoughts known, knowing there is constantly the
> threat of interruption hanging like hijab around their heads.
> >
> > If this is the reason women are (considered) multi-taskers so be it, but
> I don't think it's chromosomal, just a by-product of survival through an
> imposed steeplechase of (his)tory.
> >
> > Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own, says what it does because Woolf
> claims a woman needs to find her true voice in a safe space in her control,
> a place she where she can be left alone, to speak without the drone of
> other people's voices being overlaid and imposed upon her.
> >
> > If such a social dynamic is something that a man also experiences (and
> so I believe the dynamic need not be isolated to women only), then I would
> say he would have an equal requirement to a safe space to connect to his
> own inner speech. I'm sure though, this would occur differently, since the
> social pressures are likely not the same, though there would be family
> resemblances, as I imagine that censorship of speech has deep psychological
> consequences for human beings in general.
> >
> > One point Woolf makes in AROOO, is that when a woman speaks from this
> injury she is not considered legitimate, and this means she is not free to
> the spontaneous thought required to be imaginative or innovative, because
> her speech is in reference to constrained reaction rather than unfettered
> creation.
> >
> > I would love to hear what women on this list think about that? To add or
> augment? (Though men are welcome to say what they like also, of course...
> without interruption).
> >
> > Kind regards,
> >
> > Annalisa
> >
> >
>
>
>
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