glass ceiling
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]A metaphor using ceiling to suggest a barrier to upward mobility, and glass to allude to the often unacknowledged or “invisible” nature of this limitation.
Coined by US author and diversity advocate Marilyn Loden in 1978.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]glass ceiling (plural glass ceilings)
- (idiomatic) An unwritten, uncodified barrier to further promotion or progression, in employment and elsewhere, for a member of a specific demographic group.
- 1991 December 15, Kathyrin E. Diaz, “Telling Fortune”, in Gay Community News, volume 19, number 22, page 7:
- There are fears of hitting a "glass ceiling" beyond which known or suspected gay men and lesbians cannot rise. According to Fortune: "In a 1987 survey by the Wall Street Journal, 66% of major-company CEO's said they would be reluctant to put a homosexual on management committees"
- 2007 January 5, Polly Curtis, “Six thousand women missing from boardrooms, politics and courts”, in The Guardian[1]:
- Women are “woefully” under-represented in parliament, the courts and the boardroom, with new research showing that the glass ceiling is still holding back 6,000 women from the top 33,000 jobs in Britain.
- 2017 September 19, Jennifer Szalai, “The Education of Ellen Pao”, in New York Times[2]:
- […] it was the genteel chauvinism of the enlightened elites at Kleiner Perkins that carried with it the sting of betrayal. They promised her a meritocracy and gave her a glass ceiling instead: “It just wasn’t fair.”
- 2021 November 19, Chris Megerian, quoting Bakari Sellers, “Kamala Harris makes history, again, as first woman with presidential power — for 85 minutes”, in Los Angeles Times[3]:
- “Has the glass ceiling shattered?” said Bakari Sellers, a political ally of Harris. “No, but it does have another crack.”
- 2022 July 29, Lux Alptraum, “Women, the Game Is Rigged. It’s Time We Stop Playing by the Rules.”, in The New York Times[4], →ISSN:
- And yet as we stand amid the metaphorical shards of all those shattered glass ceilings, it’s hard to ignore the fact that empowerment feminism hasn’t really delivered on its promises.
- 2023 October 14, Raphael Minder, quoting Agnieszka Holland, “Lunch with the FT”, in FT Weekend, Life & Arts, page 3:
- “My father really believed at some point that [communism][sic] would be great for humanity, perhaps also because he was facing all the glass ceilings for being a Jewish boy,” she says.
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]unwritten, uncodified barrier
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References
[edit]- “glass ceiling”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- Eric Partridge (2005) “glass ceiling”, in Tom Dalzell and Terry Victor, editors, The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, volume 1 (A–I), London, New York, N.Y.: Routledge, →ISBN, page 873.
Italian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unadapted borrowing from English glass ceiling.
Noun
[edit]glass ceiling m (invariable)
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