Post on 28-Mar-2015
Feminist research and
epistemologies
SO 3066
lecture outline feminist critique of sociological research and methods
counting or quoting?: debate over the appropriateness of quantitative or qualitative research methods in feminist research
tend to favour qualitative methods
e.g. refer to Oakley’s (1981) study – transition to motherhood - and the idea of a ‘participatory model’
is there a feminist method?
gendered nature of knowledge
feminist sociology of knowledge
feminist epistemologies: e.g. standpoint and empiricism
some final points to think about
feminist critique of research
challenge the myth of ‘hygienic research’:
question the ‘scientistic cloak’ - the idea of detached value-neutral researcher
research is not always orderly – messy
reflexivity - no account of researcher’s self and their relationship to/with those participating in the research project
‘counting or quoting’?
debate about using quantitative and qualitative research methods in feminist research
quantitative methods regarded as incompatible and unsuitable for feminist research
e.g. survey – positivistic, one-way - exploitative process, associated with male values of control – ‘rape’ analogy
qualitative methods = more compatible with carrying out ‘feminist’ research?
e.g. un/semi-structured interviews – build rapport – two-way process
e.g. ‘participatory model’
(e.g. Oakley 1981; Bryman 2001; Duncombe & Jessop 2002; Letherby 2003)
Oakley (1981) – conducted research - transition to motherhood
repeated interviews – 55 women twice pre and twice post birth – even attended the odd birth too!
her respondents would ask her questions – read quote
intense research context – increased personal involvement/rapport
BUT
cultivating rapport or ‘faking friendships’ – exploitative too?
assume shared womanhood - can rapport be forged between all women irrespective of class, ethnicity, sexuality etc?
feminist research – considered too subjective – issues of validity (led to a range of feminist epistemological positions – baseline to assess ‘truth claims’ – discuss shortly)
also some feminists argue that statistical research has an important role to play too – e.g. extent of discrimination – equal opportunities
Oakley and others have since advocated mixed-method (i.e. quantitative and qualitative) research designs
depend on research question(s)? – ‘it’s not what you do it’s how you do it’!
is there a feminist method? method: research techniques/practices – e.g. ethnography, survey,
interview (choice of recipe)
methodology: theories of how research is conducted – e.g. qualitative or quantitative (cooking process)
epistemology: theory of knowledge – (kind of meal produced)
according to Stanley & Wise (in Stanley 1990:26):
who can be a knower?what can be known?what counts as valid knowledge?what is the relationship between knowing and being (ontology)
what makes feminist research ‘feminist’ is the methodology and epistemology NOT the method
gendered knowledge?(e.g. Letherby 2003)
reason and the ‘gendered metaphor’ – dualistic, oppositional, and hierarchical:
men - women culture - nature reason - emotion mind - body public - private
‘authorized knowledge’ - basis of academic knowledge
(institutionalised and legitimate), scientific, reason, objective, associated with men?
‘experiential knowledge’ – everyday, emotional, subjective, associated with women - dismissed?
feminists claim that knowledge is not gender neutral
‘malestream knowledge has been used to control women, and feminist knowledge is an aid to the emancipation of women’ (Abbott et al 2005: 366)
‘a feminist sociology of knowledge’(according to Lengermann & Niebrugge-Brantley in Ritzer 2000: 477)
claim that knowledge and understanding of the world:
from the standpoint of groups of people
is always partial and interest laden
varies within and between groups
power relations
‘feminist standpoint epistemology’ – standpoint of women
feminist sociology and knowledge
‘sociology for women’ (Smith 1987)
women’s ‘outsider status’
‘epistemic privilege’
feminist standpoint epistemology
sometimes called ‘women’s experience epistemology’- because experience is the considered the basis of knowledge
‘standpoint’ – ‘what we do shapes what we know’
builds on and adapts Marx’s insights of the proletariat / particular emphasis on the sexual division of labour – women are particularly aware of and responsible for the grounded responsibilities of everyday life
women – oppressed class – comprehend their own subordination and those who oppress them (men) – this affords a ‘truer’ understanding of social reality – not distorted by ideologies of power
claim that feminist knowledge is less biased than malestream knowledge
BUT
feminism motivated by political interests too?
are all women the same – is there a common basis of oppression – can some women share more in common with
some men than with other women?
hierarchy of oppression?
are some women more oppressed than others e.g. Black women – hence do they produce truer or different version(s)
of reality?
problem of relativism?
is it more accurate to speak of standpoints?
feminist empiricism
accepts the norms of positivist science – change ‘bad’ and ‘sexist’ practices instead (compatible with liberal feminism - reform)
‘faulty science’ becomes more ‘accurate’ and ‘good science’ (assumes a realist ontology)
promote ‘non-sexist’ research e.g. language; concepts; implications of findings
research designs and samples include men AND women
correct androcentric biases in knowledge and research
BUT perpetuates and leaves intact the myth of
‘hygienic research’ - many feminists reject this assumption
i.e. notion of a neutral researcher who attempts to access and represent an objective reality
people are objects in such research
lacks reflexivity and transparency of research process?
summary of main issues feminist critique of sociological research and methods
counting or quoting?: debate over the appropriateness of quantitative or qualitative research methods in
feminist research
tend to favour qualitative methods
e.g. refer to Oakley’s (1981) study – transition to motherhood - and the idea of a ‘participatory model’
is there a feminist method?
summary of main issues
gendered nature of knowledge
feminist sociology of knowledge
feminist epistemologies: e.g. standpoint and empiricism
some final points to think about
final thoughts
feminist theory arose out of personal politics – importance of women’s everyday ‘lived experiences’ is it becoming disconnected
from women’s experiences?
to what extent is feminist theory politically relevant today and for
whom?
given the emphasis on diversity and differences between women – how effectively and legitimately can feminists from different
cultural, religious, class, ethnic backgrounds etc theorise about ‘other’ women and their experiences?
final thoughts
does a researcher have to be working class to study working class women or of the same ethnic origin etc – infinite regress – if this is
the case what are the implications for sociology?
when we talk about ‘gender’ and ‘sociology of gender’ – we tend to equate gender as a shorthand for women – why is this? Are men not
gendered too?
the influence and impact of feminism and feminist theory has played a part in opening up a field referred to as ‘men’s studies’ whereby
male researchers look at men and masculinity or masculinities – can men utilise feminist perspectives?