Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective
Over the last two decades feminist inquiries have raised fundamental challenges to the ways social science has analyzed women, men, and social life. From the beginning, issues about method, methodology, and epistemology have been intertwined with discussion of how best to correct the partial and di...
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Format: | Book Section |
Language: | English |
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Penerbit Universiti Utara Malaysia
2005
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Online Access: | https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/2428/1/09062010153710_01.pdf |
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author | Yusof, Rohana @ Norliza |
author2 | Mustaffa, Che Su |
author_facet | Mustaffa, Che Su Yusof, Rohana @ Norliza |
author_sort | Yusof, Rohana @ Norliza |
collection | UUM |
description | Over the last two decades feminist inquiries have raised fundamental challenges to the ways social science has analyzed women, men, and social life. From the beginning, issues about method, methodology, and epistemology have been intertwined with discussion of how best to correct the
partial and distorted accounts in the traditional analyses. Is there a distinctive feminist method of inquiry? On what grounds would one defend the assumptions and procedures of feminist researchers? Questions such as these have generated
important controversies within feminist theory and politics, as well as curiosity and anticipation in the traditional discourses (Harding, 1987). Brannen (1994) has
pointed out three things in particular that are leading feminists to reconsider their position on method:
(i) There is the need to acknowledge that the qualitative techniques they have tended to favour are not in and of themselves specific to feminism.(ii) Indeed, they are all an integral part of social science research and
have their own histories of development and change outside and (iii) Independent of feminism. Feminist may have appropriated these techniques, but they did not create them. They have also modified them, although they are not alone in doing so.(iv) In addition, a number of researchers have recently drawn attention to the ways in which the polarization of quantitative versus qualitative impoverished research, and there have been calls for the use of multiple method to be used in a complementary rather than a competitive way. |
first_indexed | 2024-07-04T05:18:58Z |
format | Book Section |
id | uum-2428 |
institution | Universiti Utara Malaysia |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-07-04T05:18:58Z |
publishDate | 2005 |
publisher | Penerbit Universiti Utara Malaysia |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | uum-24282011-02-21T12:23:56Z https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/2428/ Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective Yusof, Rohana @ Norliza HQ The family. Marriage. Woman Over the last two decades feminist inquiries have raised fundamental challenges to the ways social science has analyzed women, men, and social life. From the beginning, issues about method, methodology, and epistemology have been intertwined with discussion of how best to correct the partial and distorted accounts in the traditional analyses. Is there a distinctive feminist method of inquiry? On what grounds would one defend the assumptions and procedures of feminist researchers? Questions such as these have generated important controversies within feminist theory and politics, as well as curiosity and anticipation in the traditional discourses (Harding, 1987). Brannen (1994) has pointed out three things in particular that are leading feminists to reconsider their position on method: (i) There is the need to acknowledge that the qualitative techniques they have tended to favour are not in and of themselves specific to feminism.(ii) Indeed, they are all an integral part of social science research and have their own histories of development and change outside and (iii) Independent of feminism. Feminist may have appropriated these techniques, but they did not create them. They have also modified them, although they are not alone in doing so.(iv) In addition, a number of researchers have recently drawn attention to the ways in which the polarization of quantitative versus qualitative impoverished research, and there have been calls for the use of multiple method to be used in a complementary rather than a competitive way. Penerbit Universiti Utara Malaysia Mustaffa, Che Su Wan Abdullah, Wan Abd Rahman Khudzri Khalid, Mohamad Sukeri 2005 Book Section PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/2428/1/09062010153710_01.pdf Yusof, Rohana @ Norliza (2005) Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective. In: Pembangunan Implikasi Sosial dan Fizikal. Penerbit Universiti Utara Malaysia, Sintok, pp. 109-116. ISBN 9833282547 http://lintas.uum.edu.my:8080/elmu/index.jsp?module=webopac-l&action=fullDisplayRetriever.jsp&szMaterialNo=0000242630 |
spellingShingle | HQ The family. Marriage. Woman Yusof, Rohana @ Norliza Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
title | Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
title_full | Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
title_fullStr | Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
title_full_unstemmed | Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
title_short | Researching women's lives: Issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
title_sort | researching women s lives issues of epistemology from the feminist perspective |
topic | HQ The family. Marriage. Woman |
url | https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/2428/1/09062010153710_01.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv | AT yusofrohananorliza researchingwomenslivesissuesofepistemologyfromthefeministperspective |