This study qualitatively examines how male individuals in subordinate positions in a Japanese workplace construct institutional identities in superior-subordinate interactions in the workplace. The analysis demonstrates that the male subordinates’ use of the masu form (the addressee honorific form) in conjunction with their epistemic stance contributes to the display of different facets of institutional identities. It also shows that individuals in subordinate positions draw on various discourse strategies, such as incomplete phrases and the plain form (the non-honorific form), so as to obscure the social relationships between superiors and themselves, as well as to avoid performing the role of buka ‘work subordinate’, who is obligated to obey superiors. Confirming the findings of previous research on identity construction, this study demonstrates that by strategically manipulating their linguistic resources, male subordinates can display different institutional identities on a moment-by-moment basis in a given context. Furthermore, the study contributes to the examination of power relations in workplace discourse, as well as touching upon a gender difference in language use.
Antaki, Charles, and Sue Widdicombe (1998) Identity as an achievement and as a tool. In C. Antaki, and Widdicombe (eds.), Identities in Talk. London: Sage, pp. 1–14. BoP
Baxter, Judith (2008) Is it all tough talking at the top?: A post-structuralist analysis of the construction of gendered speaker identities of British business leaders within interview narratives. Gender and Language 21: 197–222.
Chiles, Tina (2007) The construction of an identity as “mentor” in white collar and academic workplaces: A preliminary analysis. Journal of Pragmatics 391: 730–741. BoP
Clifton, Jonathan, and Dorien Van De Mieroop (2010) “Doing” ethos - A discursive approach to the strategic deployment and negotiation of identities in meetings. Journal of Pragmatics 421: 2449–2461.
Cook, Haruko M. (1996) The use of addressee honorifics in Japanese elementary school classrooms. In N. Akatsuka, S. Iwasaki, and S. Strauss (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics, vol. 5. Stanford, CA: CSLI, pp. 67–81.
Cook, Haruko M. (2006) Japanese politeness as an interactional achievement: Academic consultation sessions in Japanese universities. Multilingua 251: 269–291. BoP
Holmes, Janet (2006) Gendered Talk at Work: Constructing Gender Identity through Workplace Discourse. Malden, MA: Blackwell. BoP
Holmes, Janet, and Meredith Marra (2002) Having a laugh at work: How humour contributes to workplace culture. Journal of Pragmatics 341: 1683–1710. BoP
Holmes, Janet, and Meredith Marra (2004) Relational practice in the workplace: Women’s talk or gendered discourse?Language in Society 331: 377–398. BoP
Holmes, Janet, and Maria Stubbe (2003) Power and Politeness in the Workplace: A Sociolinguistic Analysis of Talk at Work. London: Longman.
Jacoby, Sally, and Patrick Gonzales (1991) The constitution of expert-novice in scientific discourse. Issues in Applied Linguistics 21: 149–181. BoP
Makino, Seiichi (2002) When does communication turn mentally inward?: A case study of Japanese formal-to-informal switching. In N. Akatsuka, and S. Strauss (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics, vol. 10. Stanford, CA: CSLI, pp. 121–135.
Mills, Sara, and Louise Mullany (2011) Language, Gender and Feminism: Theory, Methodology and Practice.
2018. Introduction. In Japanese at Work, ► pp. 1 ff.
Nakamura, Momoko
2017. Between Performed Persona and Assigned Identity Categories: Stereotype as Identity Resource for Japanese Business Women in Leadership Positions. In Challenging Leadership Stereotypes through Discourse, ► pp. 239 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 21 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.