Women Whistleblowers: Examining parrhesia, power and gender with Sophocles’ Antigone

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Abstract

How do gender and power intersect in whistleblowing situations? In this article, we deepen understandings of whistleblowing as a contemporary form of parrhesia. To explore the complex interactions of gender and power, we analyse in-depth, qualitative data from senior women managers whistleblowing in financial services organizations in France, Ireland and the United States. Sophocles’ play Antigone, read with a feminist lens, inspires a novel theoretical framing for understanding how structures of gender and power can be subverted, as women whistleblowers move between positions of masculine, feminine, subjugation and control. Our article contributes to organizational research on whistleblowing by showing how parrhesiastic risk intersects with gender in nuanced ways: violent gendered reprisals can occur in momentary interactions that are painfully internalized, prompting a search for support from outside sources. These acts of exclusion necessitate the creation of new subject positions beyond those on offer within the organization. Overall our article demonstrates how experiences of ‘outsider truth-telling’ from the margins shed light on the power dynamics in whistleblowing situations.

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APA

Kenny, K., & Fanchini, M. (2024). Women Whistleblowers: Examining parrhesia, power and gender with Sophocles’ Antigone. Organization Studies, 45(2), 275–296. https://doi.org/10.1177/01708406231187073

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