Joanne Ardovini-Brooker, Ph.D.
ARDOVINI-BROOKER, SPRING, 2002
...feminist epistemologies are the golden keys
that unlock the door to feminist research. Once the door is unlocked,
a better understanding of the distinctive nature of feminist research
can occur.
There are many questions surrounding feminist research. The most common
question is: What makes feminist research distinctive from traditional
research within the Social Sciences? In trying to answer this
question, we need to examine feminist epistemology and the intertwining
nature of epistemology, methodology (theory and analysis of how research
should proceed), and methods (techniques for gathering data) utilized
by feminist researchers. Feminist epistemology in contrast to traditional
epistemologies is the foundation on which feminist methodology is
built. In turn, the research that develops from this methodology differs
greatly from research that develops from traditional methodology and
epistemology. Therefore, I argue that one must have a general understanding
of feminist epistemology and methodology before one can understand
what makes this type of research unique. Such a foundation will assist
us in our exploration of the realm of feminist research, while illuminating
the differences between feminist and traditional research.
An Introduction to Feminist Epistemology
Epistemology is the study of knowledge and how it is that people
come to know what they know (Johnson, 1995, p. 97). Originating
from philosophy, epistemology comes to us from a number of disciplines,
i.e.: sociology, psychology, political science, education, and womens
studies (Duran, 1991, p. xi). Feminist epistemology emerged from
research within these fields that professed to spell out what feminist
knowledge entails, what is implied by womens ways of
knowing, and research on womens lives (p. xi).
Unlike traditional epistemology, the term feminist epistemology
does not have a single referent. Feminist theorists have used the
term variously to refer to women's "ways of knowing",
"women's experiences", or simple "women's knowledge"
(Alcoff & Potter, 1993, p. 1). Therefore, the term feminist
epistemology is a means of summarizing, to some extent, and integrating
women's knowledge and experiences. Inherent in feminist epistemology
is the "multiplicity of women's voices" (Duran, 1991,
p. xiii). This is central to feminist research. It implies that
feminist researchers need not search for the one Truth
but for the multiple truths that exist in researching
the oppression of women.
The recent literature on feminist epistemology suggests that the
word "epistemology" has been "reconstructed"
by feminists to include the broadest possible sense of the term.
This has been done by drawing attention to areas previously left
untouched by traditional epistemologies and research. Additionally,
by creating "gynocentric epistemics", knowledge centered
on women's realities, a new knowledge is brought forth. The reason
for these actions is the feminist desire to have women's experiences
recognized, legitimated, and included as possible subjects of research.
The history of feminist epistemology is the history of the clash
between feminist commitments to "the struggles of women to
have their understandings of the world legitimated" and "the
commitment of traditional philosophy to various accounts of knowledge"
(Alcoff & Potter, 1993, p. 2). The history of epistemology has
also been one of inquiry into "whether knowledge was possible"
(Cartesianism/traditional epistemology) and "seldom into the
conditions producing knowledge" (feminist epistemology) (Duran,
1991, p. 3). Cartesianism, traditional epistemology, assumes the
unproblematic generalizability of knowledge from its context of
discovery to a variety of contexts of use (Stanley & Wise, 1993,
p. 191). This approach also views knowledge as existing independently
of the person(s) who produced it. Feminist epistemology rejects
these notions. The feminist researcher is an active presence,
an agent in research, and she constructs what is actually a viewpoint,
a point of view that is both a construction or version and is consequently
and necessarily partial in its understandings (Stanley &
Wise, 1993, p. 6). Feminist epistemology assumes "that those
we deem to be knowers actually do possess knowledge" (Duran,
1991, p. 4). In other words, knowledge is contextually specific
and not independent of the person(s) who produce it (p. 6). Therefore,
feminist researchers must acknowledge the ethical and political
issues involved in what we do, how we do it, and the claims we make
for it (p. 7). We must not assume the generalizability of
our knowledge and experiences.
As seen above, feminist epistemology evolved from a critique of
traditional epistemology and its search for a dominant narrative.
Today, feminist epistemology is comprised of research programs that
move beyond the critique of traditional research to a reframing
of the problematic of knowledge to unearth the politics of epistemology
(Alcoff & Potter, 1993, pp. 2-3). Alcoff and Potter suggest
that feminist epistemologies should not be taken as involving a
commitment to gender as the primary axis of oppression or positing
that gender is a theoretical variable separable from other axes
of oppression and susceptible to a unique analysis (pp. 3-4). If
feminist research is to assist in the liberation of women by researching
our oppression, then it must address virtually all forms of domination
because women fill the ranks of every category of oppressed people.
Feminist epistemology "seeks to unmake the web of oppressions
and reweave the web of life" (p. 4). This is similar to what
Lorraine Code describes as standpoint epistemologies. In her discussion,
"Taking Subjectivity into Account", Code argues that traditional,
mainstream epistemology creates the illusion of a universal "Truth"
through the removal of "unacceptable" points of view.
These "unacceptable" points of view are the experiences
of the oppressed. Therefore, according to Code, the goal of feminist
epistemology is to overturn "perspectival hierarchies"
(Alcoff & Potter, 1993, p. 5).
Recent work concerning feminist epistemology, (i.e., Fox-Keller,
1985; Bordo, 1988; Harding, 1986) has a common theme: "There
is a masculinist, androcentric tradition that yields a hypernormative,
idealized, and stylistically aggressive mode of thought" (Duran,
1991, p. 8). Keller analyzes the relationship between androcentric
epistemology in Plato and Plato's philosophy of sexual love and
its link to metaphysics (p. 8). Bordo's study of Descartes Meditations
is similar to Keller's work. Hardings analysis offers the
feminist responses to the androcentrism inherent in science (p.10).
All are examples of feminist epistemology and its reactions to traditional
research.
Hardings analysis has been interpreted by Alcoff & Potter
as an illustration of the impact of androcentrism upon traditional
epistemological assumptions of science. Harding argues that feminist
epistemology, particularly feminist standpoint epistemologies, must
seek validation of the perspectives of knowledge that have been
ignored by traditional research (Alcoff & Potter, 1993, p. 5).
Harding identifies herself as a feminist standpoint epistemologist.
Yet, Harding does not go as far as embracing relativism. She suggests
that feminist standpoint epistemologies will increase and strengthen
womens ability to achieve objectivity. This can be done by
the use of feminist methodology, which involves starting from the
lives of marginalized people (Alcoff & Potter, 1993, p.6). This
will reveal more of the unexamined assumptions influencing science
and will generate more critical questions, thus producing a less
partial and distorted account (p. 6). Therefore, Harding argues
that this research needs to be undertaken by everyone, not just
by the marginalized.
Stanley and Wise disagree with Harding's suggestion. They advocate
women as the knowers and the doers. They also view feminist epistemology
a bit differently. They define feminist epistemology as a "framework
or theory for specifying the constitution and generation of knowledge
about the social world; that is, it concerns how to understand the
nature of reality (Stanley & Wise, 1993, p. 188). Since
women's realities differ from men's realities, then feminist epistemology
is women's epistemology. For example, womens leadership styles
may vary from male leadership styles because they are not phallocentric
in origin. Womens leadership styles emanates from a female
center and construction of reality. This reality is one of objectification
and marginality, as defined by an androcentric society. Therefore,
womens leadership styles tend to be transformational, collaborative
efforts rather than a traditional one man show.
Feminist epistemology distinguishes what women's knowledge is and
how it may differ from the knowledge that dominates, which is usually
men's knowledge and traditional research. This is done by specifying
the sex of the knowers. Feminist epistemologies also
examine by what means someone becomes the knower and "the means
by which competing knowledge-claims are adjudicated and some rejected
in favor of another/others" (Stanley &Wise, 1993, p. 188).
I believe that this is fundamental to feminist research, "for
it is around the constitution of a feminist epistemology that feminism
can most directly and far-reachingly challenge non-feminist frameworks
and ways of working" (Stanley & Wise, 1993, pp. 188-189).
Stanley and Wise allege that there are key areas of the feminist
research process that draw from feminist epistemology, which sets
it apart from traditional research, such as:
1. The researcher/research relationship should not be a hierarchical
relationship;
2. Emotions should be seen as valuable aspects of the research process;
3. The conceptualizations of "objectivity" and subjectivity
as binaries or dichotomies must not occur in research;
4. The researchers intellectual autobiography must be taken
into consideration when viewing their conclusions;
5. The researcher must consider the existence and management of
the different "realities" or versions held by the researchers
and the researched;
6. The researcher must be aware of issues surrounding authority
and power in research;
7. The researcher must recognize that there is authority and power
in the written representation of research. (p. 189)
Harding describes these basic feminist epistemologies and places
them into three categories: feminist standpoint, feminist empiricism,
and feminist postmodernism. When Harding writes of the feminist
epistemologies, she is referring to "feminist ways of knowing"
or to "feminist critiques of traditional accounts of ways of
knowing" (Duran, 1991, p. 81).
Feminist Standpoint Theory
The fact that women are charged with maintaining everyday life
is the basis for feminist standpoint theory. Within research, standpoint
feminists argue that the problem is deeper than "bad science"
or "poor research methods". The problem is that the dominant
conceptual schemes of research fit the experiences of Western, white,
elite class males (Harding, 1991, p. 48). The specific social location
of the knower is important to research because it shapes what is
known and what is not known. Standpoint feminists argue that not
all perspectives are equally valid, complete, discovered, or even
heard by the use of traditional research methods. Therefore, it
is essential for feminist research to begin from women's lives,
"then we can arrive at empirically and theoretically more adequate
descriptions (p. 48). Harding argues, "Women's specific
location in patriarchal societies is actually a resource in the
construction of new knowledge (Andersen, 1994, p. 373 citing
Harding, 1991). Reflecting long-standing feminist criticisms
of the absence of women from or marginalized reports of women in
research accounts, research done from the perspective of standpoint
theories stresses a particular view that builds on and from womens
experiences (Olsen, 1994, pp. 162-163 citing Harding, 1987).
Standpoint theory assumes that systems of privilege are less visible
to those who benefit the most and who control the resources that
define the dominant cultural beliefs, i.e.: whites, males, heterosexuals,
etc. Standpoint feminists believe that it takes the standpoint of
the oppressed groups, i.e. people of color, women, and homosexuals,
to recognize systems of oppression and privilege. However, this
standpoint is not accepted blindly. Systems of oppression
also shape the consciousness of the oppressed" (Andersen, 1994,
p. 373). Therefore, standpoint feminists must construct knowledge
that reflects the experiences of both the dominant and subordinate
groups in order for that knowledge to spawn liberation.
Dorothy Smith, Nancy Hartsock, and Sandra Harding, as well as Hilary
Rose, Jane Flax, and Alison Jaggar, among others, all assisted in
the development of standpoint themes that originated from Hegel's
insight into the relationship between the master and the slave.
The themes also originated in the insight of Karl Marx and Friedrich
Engelss development of the "proletarian standpoint"
(Harding, 1991, p. 120). These standpoint researchers/theorists
focus on differences between men and women's situations. There are
many differences, which are the grounds for standpoint feminists
to make their claims. According to Harding, there are seven basic
assumptions concerning the differences between mens and women's
experiences. The seven differences are summarized below:
1. Women's different lives have been erroneously devalued and neglected
as starting points for scientific research and as the generators
of evidence for or against knowledge claims.
2. Women are valuable "strangers", "outsiders"
to the social order...women's exclusion from the design and direction
of both the social order and the production of knowledge...this
status is seen as an advantage.
3. Women's oppression gives them fewer interests in ignorance...this
is grounds for transvaluing women's differences because members
of oppressed groups have fewer interests in maintaining the status
quo.
4. Women's perspectives are from the other side of the "battle
of the sexes" that women and men engage in on a daily basis...human
knowers are active agents in their learning and women's knowledge
emerges through the struggles.
5. Women's perspectives are from everyday life, which is best for
the origins of research.
6. Women's perspectives come from mediating ideological dualisms,
nature versus culture, which enables us to understand how and why
social and cultural phenomena have taken form.
7. Women, especially women researchers, are "outsiders within"...this
increases objectivity (Harding, 1991, pp. 121- 131).
The works of Smith and Hartsock exemplify feminist standpoint research,
that is, research that starts from womens actual experience
in everyday life and ends with the stimulation of thoughts, doubts
and questions concerning traditional research (Olsen, 1994, p. 163).
Both Smith and Hartsock illustrate this challenge of traditional
research by examining the researchers place in the relations
of ruling within the research process (p. 163). They stress
the importance of intersubjectivity in research as well as the problematic
nature of the everyday world. Womens experiences are shaped
by external material factors (p. 163). Therefore, a feminist researcher
studying the experiences of women must not view the experiences
as objects for study. This would only divide subject and object
as traditionally done. Instead, a researcher must be able
to work very differently than she is able to with established sociological
strategies of thinking and inquiry that are not outside the relations
of ruling (Olsen, 1994, p.163 citing Smith, 1992).
Feminist Empiricism
Harding (1991) also discusses two other types of feminist epistemologies:
feminist empiricism and feminist postmodernism. Basically, feminist
empiricism attempts to bring the feminist criticisms of scientific
claims into the existing theories of scientific knowledge (p. 48).
Feminist empiricists argue that sexist and androcentric ways of
knowing result from "bad science". Feminist empiricists
work within the standards of the current norms of research, however;
their research proceeds on the assumptions of intersubjectivity
and commonly created meanings and the realities between researcher
and participant (Olsen, 1994, p. 163). Scholars working within
this genre do not reject traditional research per se, but try to
do it better. Feminist empiricism undercuts traditional assumptions
of research by recognizing that bias is introduced by the very nature
of the context of discovery (Danner & Landis, 1990, p. 107).
Similarly, feminist researchers recognize the social identity of
the research, i.e.: race, ethnicity, class, and gender, as relevant
to the validity of the knowledge produced by the research process.
Acknowledging the subjective stance of the researcher at once
increases the objectivity of the research and decreases the objectivism
which hides this kind of evidence from the public (Danner
& Landis, 1990, p.107 citing Harding, 1987).
Feminist Postmodernism
Feminist postmoderns argue that feminist empiricists and "standpointers"
are not radical enough. It is believed that these two approaches
still adhere to the "damaging Enlightenment beliefs about the
ability to produce one true story about reality that is out there
and ready to be reflected in the mirror of our minds (Harding,
1991, p. 48). Postmodern feminist researchers regard truth as a
destructive illusion and view the world as endless stories
or texts, many of which sustain the integration of power and oppression
and actually constitute us as subjects in a determinant order
(Olsen, 1994, p. 164). With such a foundation, the focus in postmodern
feminist research is narrative. The distinction between text and
reality where gender is no longer privileged, as seen in standpoint
feminist research, is important to this new ethnography
offered by postmodern feminists. This new ethnography
is more than just writing it up; it lets the people
we are studying speak for themselves (p. 164).
There are three types of inquiry of interest to postmodern feminists.
First, there is an interest in the social construction of realities.
In other words, postmodern feminists examine such artifacts as video,
film, music, and the body to understand the production, distribution,
consumption and exchange of cultural objects and their meanings
(Olsen, 1994, p.164 citing Denzin, 1992). Second is the textual
analysis of these cultural objects, their meanings, and the practices
that surround them (Olsen, 1994, p.164 citing Denzin, 1992).
Third, postmodern feminists study the impact of these culturally
constructed meanings. They study the lived cultures and experiences,
which are shaped by the cultural meanings that circulate in everyday
life (Olsen, 1994, p.164 citing Denzin, 1992). As Patricia
Ticineto Clough argues, The textuality never refers to a text,
as in traditional research, but to the processes of desire
elicited and repressed, projected and introjected in the activity
of reading and writing, of experiencing culture (Olsen 1994,
p.164 citing Clough, 1993).
Postmodern feminist research rejects the oedipal logic of realist
narrativity (Clough, 1998, p. xiii). Feminist critics of traditional
research refer to the narrative of the heroic scientists,
the researcher who goes out in search of truth, struggling to get
there, stay there, and return from there with a truly objective
story of the world (p. xiii). Framing research in such a manner
grants a form of subject-identity that privileges masculinity and
serves to authorize cultural constructions of reality (p. xiii).
Thus, rather than maintain the same male-dominated focus of traditional
research, feminist research focuses on the problem of discursive
authority at the level of literary practices at the level
of a political unconscious, which the narrative logic of Western,
modern discourse puts into play and on the way narrativity
elicits the participation of readers and writers in the practices
of dominant forms of knowledge, thereby showing how a male-dominated
production of knowledge is linked to modern practices of reading
and writing practices of meaning construction generally
(Clough, 1994, p. 3). This focus on discursive authority may seem
too narrow. Postmodern feminist researchers have argued to extend
their focus to include the assumptions and methodological orientations
of research.
Stanley and Wise reject Harding's conception of the empiricist
and postmodern epistemologies. They believe that it is around the
constitution of feminist epistemology that feminist methodology
develops, research methods can be conducted, and where feminism
can directly challenge non-feminist frameworks (Stanley & Wise,
1993, p. 189). They argue that to conduct proper feminist research,
the methods must derive from the methodology, which derives from
feminist epistemology. The researcher/study participant relationship
must not be hierarchical in nature and emotions must be viewed as
an aspect of the research process. The researcher must also be critical
of objective versus subjective binaries, focusing on the processes
by which understanding and conclusions are reached. This understanding
is achieved through the researchers frank presentation of
the existence and management of different realities held by both
the researcher and the researched. The feminist researcher should
also examine the issues of power in research and try to dispel any
and all unequal distributions of power, including the written representations
of the research findings (p. 89).
Feminist epistemology not only impacts what researchers examine,
it also affects the methodology utilized by the researcher. Therefore,
we must understand the intertwining nature of epistemology, methodology,
and methods in order to recognize the impact that feminist epistemology
has upon the research that evolves from it basic assumptions.
The Intertwining Nature of Epistemology, Methodology, and Methods
The answer to the question posed in this article, "Is feminist
research distinct from traditional research within the Social Sciences?,
is yes. Yet, we cannot leave this discussion at this point. We must
explore feminist methodology, which evolves from feminist epistemology
and lays the foundation for feminist research. This leads us to
another question, Is there a distinct feminist methodology?
Here, we are concerned with "theory and analysis of how research
should proceed". Feminist methodology is connected to feminist
epistemology, which challenges issues of adequate theory of knowledge
or justificatory strategy and traditional theory and methods (Harding,
1987, p. 2). The answer to this question is yes. I would argue that
there is a distinct feminist methodology. I would also argue that
feminist methodology is based on distinct epistemological assumptions
that differ from traditional methodology. For example, a main feminist
epistemological assumption is that "rather than there being
a woman's way of knowing, or a feminist way of
doing research, there are women's ways of knowing" (Reinharz,
1992, p. 4 citing Belenky, Clinchy, Goldberger, and Tarul, 1986).
"The ways of knowing that women have cultivated and learned
to value, ways we have come to believe are powerful but have been
neglected and denigrated by the dominant intellectual ethos of our
time" (preface). Therefore, women have different ways of knowing
and understanding reality. In turn, research concerning women must
be approached differently.
Feminist methodology, due to its basis in feminist epistemology,
proposes alternative theories of knowledge that legitimate women
as knowers. Avoiding the add women and stir ideology
of traditional research that begins its analyses only in mens
experiences does this. For example, theories of crime have a fascination
with male deviance and crime. As Chesney-Lind argues, criminology
suffers from the "Westside Story Syndrome". According
to Chesney-Lind, this androcentric focus of research may be explained
by Margaret Mead's observation (Chesney-Lind, 1988):
that whatever men do, even if it is dressing dolls for religious
ceremonies, has higher
status and is more highly rewarded than whatever women do...For
this reason, field
studies focus on male activities and attributes wherever possible:
to study them is to
convey higher status to the researcher (p. 26).
Therefore, feminist methodology evolves from the epistemological
assumption that women's experiences provide the new resources for
research (Harding, 1987, p. 7). This "fault line", as
Dorothy Smith refers to the fragmentation of women's identities,
offers rich sources of insight from which feminist research generates
(Harding, 1987, pp. 7-8). The goal of this research is to provide
explanations, for women, of social phenomena that affect their lives
so that they can understand themselves and our gendered world better.
"In the best feminist research, the purpose of research and
analysis are not separable from the origins of research problems"
(Harding, 1987, p. 8). Therefore, the personal is very much political.
For example, Dorothy Smith and Nancy Hartsock "note that all
research is done from a particular standpoint or location in the
social system" (Andersen, 1994, p. 372). For women, this location
is one of the oppressed groups.
Smith continues the debate by stating, "Research and theory
must situate social actors within their everyday worlds". Unless
research begins within the ordinary facts of lives, then the knowledge
constructed will be "both alienating and apart from the actual
experiences of human actors (Andersen, 1994, p. 372). The
objective here is to establish the relationship between social structure
and everyday life. This relationship is especially important in
comprehending women's experiences. This is due to the fact that
the affairs of everyday life are the specific area of women's expertise.
Given the gender division of labor, women are charged with
maintaining everyday life. To overlook that fact or to treat it
as insignificant is to deny women's reality" (Andersen, 1994,
p. 373 citing Reinharz, 1983 and Smith, 1987).
Since I have argued that there is a distinctive feminist epistemology
and methodology, another question could be posed at this juncture.
Are there specific feminist methods? This question concerns
"the techniques for gathering evidence" (Harding, 1987,
p. 2). My response to this question is no. I, along with many other
feminist researchers (Stanley & Wise, 1993, Reinharz, 1992)
do not believe that there are distinct feminist techniques for gathering
evidence. "Feminists have used all existing methods and have
invented some new ones as well" (Reinharz, 1992, p. 4). Although
the epistemology and methodology of feminist research is distinct
from traditional research, the tools for collecting data remain
relatively the same. It is the approach, the epistemological assumptions
and research methodology, to research that differs from traditional
methodology and places it within the realm of feminist research.
In other words, it is the epistemology and methodology, not the
methods, which makes feminist research distinctly feminist. As Harding
argues, "It is difficult to find a satisfactory answer to the
questions about a distinctive feminist method" because discussions
of method and methodology have been "intertwined with each
other and with epistemological issues...in both the traditional
and feminist discourses (p. 2).
With this noted, feminist research methods can range from questionnaires
to oral histories. The recognition of the plurality that exists
within feminist research methods is important. I say this because
this plurality of methods is a reflection of basic epistemological
assumptions of feminist research, which contradict the epistemological
assumptions of traditional research. The feminist epistemological
assumption, of which I speak, is the recognition of the multiplicity
of womens voices and experiences. In other words, traditional
research fails to recognize that women experience the world differently
than men and each other. Traditional research has silenced these
voices and experiences by not including them in the realm of study.
Therefore, feminist epistemological assumptions are based on the
desire to create something different from that, which already exists,
dominates, and oppresses women. Traditional research ignores the
experiences of women, while feminist research celebrates them.
Feminist Research and Traditional Research: The Basic Differences
Other than the differences already illustrated, feminist research
differs from traditional research in that it locates the feminist
researcher on the same critical plane as those on which she is researching.
Both men and women, according to Harding and Smith (1991), can do
feminist research. However, many feminist researchers, including
myself, believe that nothing is separate from social life and experiences,
nor does it exist outside the social (Stanley & Wise, 1993,
p. 192). We also believe that men and women have different experiences.
Since it is argued that feminist research methods must reflect feminist
ontology, epistemology, and methodology, which are derived from
the experiences of women, then the question is, can men conduct
feminist research? This is yet another issue that is still unresolved
within the debate concerning feminist research and is a topic for
another article.
Another way feminist research differs from traditional research
is that the feminist researcher makes sense of the world and produces
generalized knowledge-claims on the basis of experiences (Stanley
& Wise, 1993, p. 8). Feminist researchers also treat knowledge
as situated because they make the assumption that particular structures
are defined as facts external to and constraining upon people (p.
8). In addition, feminist researchers are aware of the varying degrees
of oppression in relation to a woman's social location and in relation
to men, thus necessitating "prying apart the category men and
women's experiences of different men in different times, places
and circumstances" (p. 8).
Feminist research differs from traditional research in that it
rejects using research to colonize material differences among women.
This is done by presenting a social constructionist and non-essentialist
notion of "the self" (Stanley & Wise, 1993, p. 8).
Many feminist researchers believe that there is a social reality,
one which members of society construct as having objective
existence above and beyond competing constructions and interpretations
of it (p. 9). It also recognizes that social life is composed
of discussions, debates and controversies concerning objective reality
(p. 9).
A major distinction of feminist research from traditional research
is "the questions we have asked, the ways we locate ourselves
within our questions, and the purpose of our work" (Maynard
& Purvis, 1995, p. 6 citing Kelly, 1988). Feminist researchers
begin with the rejection of hierarchical relationships. By doing
this, feminist research becomes a means of sharing information.
Feminist research is characterized by a concern to record the subjective
experiences of doing research (Maynard & Purvis, 1995, p. 16).
In other words, the researcher herself becomes a subject matter
in the research. She must take into account her personal experiences
as part of the research process. This differs from the objective
stance that traditional research usually takes.
Feminist research is distinctive in that the research is political
in nature and has the potential to bring about change in women's
lives (Maynard & Purvis, 1995, p. 16). Feminism is both theory
and practice. It is a framework that informs women's lives. "Its
purpose is to understand women's oppression in order that we might
end it" (p. 28). This is what it means to do feminist research.
It also means becoming part of the process of discovery and understanding.
It is a responsibility to attempt to create and initiate social
change. We must, as feminist researchers, see feminist research
as praxis. Through our research we create useful knowledge in order
to make a difference and inform activism (Maynard &
Purvis, 1995, p. 28).
As illustrated above, differences may be found when examining the
goals of traditional and feminist research. The goal of traditional
research is to uncover human experiences and to understand human
behavior. In addition, the goal of feminist research is to uncover
and remove the blinders that obscure knowledge and observations
concerning human experiences and behaviors that have traditionally
been silenced. In this light, many feminist researchers see a direct
relationship between feminist consciousness, feminism, and research.
Conclusion
In conclusion, no matter what the discipline or method of research,
the unique nature of feminist research is its foundation of basic
feminist epistemological assumptions. These assumptions are critiques
of traditional research. Feminist researchers argue that there is
a pervasive lack of information about womens worlds and the
oppression they experience. There is also a bias in the under-representation
of women researchers. Therefore, feminist researchers believe there
is a need to re-conceptualize traditionally investigated phenomena
to include womens experiences. They also argue that new research
questions must be asked that have crucial implications both for
the results obtained and for practical action (Cook, 1983, p. 127).
These basic assumptions, as well as the fore mentioned epistemological
assumptions, lay the foundation for feminist methodology and the
resulting research. Therefore, it is the epistemological assumptions
that affect the methodology that ultimately create feminist research.
With all this said, I believe that feminist epistemologies are the
golden keys that unlock the door to feminist research. Once the
door is unlocked, a better understanding of the distinctive nature
of feminist research can occur.
References
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Author
Dr. Joanne Ardovini-Brooker is an Assistant Professor in
the Department of Sociology at Sam Houston State University.
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