This thesis examines the development of management in financial services and its
implications on managers' activities and socialisation. The thesis uses gender and
emotional labour as the main themes for the discussion of management in the
financial services.
The thesis reports on two ethnographic case studies within two UK retail banks.
Analyses are based on data derived from interviews, observations and documents.
Both the literature and data suggest that management in the service sector centres
around the management of organisational cultures. Managers must disseminate the
organisational values in order to extract excellent customer service from the front-line
staff. Managers themselves are acculturated into the organisation and its values, in
order to more easily acculturate their staff.
The data indicates that although management appears to have been feminised,
masculine values still dominate. Managers are socialised into organisational cultures
in which human relations rhetoric looms large and both male and female managers
employ `feminine' management styles. Confusingly however, male managers' skills
seem to be valued more and male-dominated business areas receive greater kudos. A
disjunction between rhetoric and reality is thus evident.
In addition, both management and emotional labour are presented as gendered in
sociological literature. The data indicates that although management styles and
practices are perceived to be gendered, there is little evidence to support the
stereotypes. Both men and women can be seen to be performing emotional labour
too, but it is the expectations of others and their different life experiences that can lead
to gender differences in the way that emotional labour is displayed.
Date of Award | 2001 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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- Gender
- Finance
- Taxation
- Emotional labour
- Management & business studies
- Management
- Human services
- Sociology
Management in the financial services : emotional labour and gender
Watson, S. (Author). 2001
Student thesis: PhD