6533b856fe1ef96bd12b2707

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Speaking out against everyday sexism : Gender and epistemics in accusations of “mansplaining”

Ann DoehringBogdana HumaJack B. JoyceHanna Leena RistimäkiFábio Ferraz De Almeida

subject

050101 languages & linguisticsseksismiBF050109 social psychologyHMsosiaalinen vuorovaikutuscomplaintssukupuoliEpistemics/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/gender_equalityGender StudiesArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)genderNatural (music)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBF636General PsychologytietoGender inequalitySDG 5 - Gender Equalitykeskustelunanalyysi05 social sciencescategoriessocial interactionmansplainingkategoriatSocial relationConversation analysis5141 SociologyH1epistemicssexismPsychologykielellinen vuorovaikutusSocial psychologyaccusations

description

In everyday interaction, subtle manifestations of sexism often pass unacknowledged and become internalised and thus perceived as “natural” conduct. The introduction of new vocabularies for referring to previously unnamed sexist conduct would presumably enable individuals to start problematising hitherto unchallengeable sexism. In this paper, we investigate whether and how these vocabularies empower people to speak out against sexism. We focus on the use of the term “mansplaining” which, although coined over 10 years ago, remains controversial and contested. Using Conversation Analysis and Membership Categorisation Analysis, this paper excavates the interactional methods individuals use to formulate, in vivo, some prior spate of talk as mansplaining. In doing so, speakers necessarily reformulate a co-participant’s social action to highlight its sexist nature. Accusations of mansplaining are accomplished by invoking gender (and other) categories and their associated rights to knowledge. In reconstructing another’s conduct as mansplaining, speakers display their understanding of what mansplaining is (and could be) for the purpose at hand. Thus, the paper contributes to the well-established body of interactional research on manifestations of sexism by documenting how the normativity of epistemic rights is mobilised as a resource for bringing off accusations of mansplaining. publishedVersion Peer reviewed

10.1177/0959353520979499https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/132098