The Strategic Linguist Podcast

The Grammar of Expectation: How Language Shapes Who Gets to Lead

16 min · 19. Mai 2026
Episode The Grammar of Expectation: How Language Shapes Who Gets to Lead Cover

Beschreibung

There’s a moment in every feedback conversation where power shifts. Someone’s voice gets softer. Someone else’s gets firmer. Someone hedges; someone doesn’t. And in that moment, language does the work that hierarchies used to do explicitly. We think of workplace feedback as neutral—objective assessments of work done. But language doesn’t work that way. Language carries assumptions about who can do what, who should aspire to what, and whose job it is to apologise for the space they take up. This asymmetry has a name in linguistics, and it’s been here for decades. But research into performance feedback reveals something unsettling: the grammar that creates this asymmetry isn’t incidental. It’s structural. It compounds. And by the time a woman hears it in feedback, she’s already internalised the message embedded in its syntax. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thestrategiclinguist.substack.com/subscribe [https://thestrategiclinguist.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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Alle Folgen

52 Folgen

Episode Fluent Enough to Pass: The Standard That Was Never Neutral Cover

Fluent Enough to Pass: The Standard That Was Never Neutral

You walk into an exam room. The test is supposed to measure whether you can use English. The writing section: write a 250-word essay on “the advantages and disadvantages of online learning.” You have 30 minutes. Introduction, thesis statement, three body paragraphs, conclusion. Grammar correct. Vocabulary recognisable. Structure clear. Linear. You write it. You score well. The test confirms it: you are “proficient.” Three months later, you’re in a university classroom. A professor asks what you think about a reading. Your classmates interrupt mid-sentence, build on each other’s ideas, speak over the edges of sentences. You wait for your turn. You construct a thesis. By the time you finish your setup, the conversation has moved on. Later, a colleague asks you for something you need to turn down. You give a clear, direct no, the way the test trained you to write and speak. Your colleague reads it as blunt. Something in the relationship breaks—but your accuracy is flawless. The test never measured your capacity to do either of these things. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thestrategiclinguist.substack.com/subscribe [https://thestrategiclinguist.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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Episode Who Died and Made You CEO: Genre Mimicry, Epistemic Trespassing, and the Applause Machine Cover

Who Died and Made You CEO: Genre Mimicry, Epistemic Trespassing, and the Applause Machine

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30. Juni 202615 min
Episode The Double Register: How Workplace Power Now Compounds Itself Cover

The Double Register: How Workplace Power Now Compounds Itself

Picture a team meeting. Someone makes a comment about a colleague’s accent — not a slur, nothing disciplinable, just a brief impression. The room moves on. Later, the same colleague submits a report drafted partly with AI assistance; their manager, who also uses AI but would never say so, flags the writing as “not quite right.” Both moments feel minor. Neither registers as an event. Together, they enact something more systematic than either appears to be alone. Power in contemporary workplaces has always operated on multiple registers simultaneously, but two of those registers are now converging in ways the research is now documenting directly. The first is interpersonal: who can say what to whom, encoded through the micro-level linguistic acts that determine belonging. The second is infrastructural: who can use AI fluently, and whose linguistic style AI systems are built to reward. These two registers compound each other, and recent research lets us name how. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thestrategiclinguist.substack.com/subscribe [https://thestrategiclinguist.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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