Looking through the glass walls: women engineers in Portugal
Artigo de Jornal
Women face significant barriers adjusting to the professional culture of engineers, which is
strongly connected to hegemonic masculinity. This study aims to investigate how Portuguese
female engineers negotiate their identities and subjective positions in a relational environment
marked by this dominant form of masculinity. Drawing on the analyses of interviews with 39 female engineers, we focused on the wayswomen position themselves in this professional culture and cope with the gender regimes they experience in this environment. Using a Foucauldian Discourse Analysis,we identified an essentialist and dichotomous discourse about what it is to be a man or a woman in engineering and the following four themes: disguising differences with similarities, assuming differences by valuing femininity, assuming differences and inequalities, and maintaining limits and respect. The participants in this study seemed to be stuck in a prison with transparent and unbreakable glass walls, which risks their personal and relational well-being.
Funded by the Project “Women in Science, Engineering and Technologies : the leaky pipeline effect” (PIHM/GC/0035/2008).