Share
Feminist Dilemmas in Qualitative Research
Public Knowledge and Private Lives
Edited by:
- Jane Ribbens - Oxford Brookes University, UK
- Rosalind Edwards - University of Southampton, UK
December 1997 | 224 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
How can researchers produce work relevant to the traditions and requirements of public academic knowledge while remaining faithful to the experiences and accounts of research participants based in private settings? Feminist Dilemmas in Qualitative Research explores this key dilemma and examines the interplay between theory, epistemology, and the detailed practice of research. It does this across the whole research process: access, data collection and analysis, and writing up research. It goes on to consider ways of achieving high standards of reflexivity and openness in the strategic choices made during research, examining these issues for specific projects in an open and accessible style.
Particular themes examined include the research dilemmas that occur from feminist perspectives in relation to researching private and personal social worlds, the position of the researcher as situated between public knowledge and private experience, and the dilemmas raised for researchers seeking to contribute to academic discourse while remaining close to other knowledge forms.
Feminist Dilemmas in Qualitative Research will be essential reading for social science research students and qualitative researchers. It raises wider issues of the nature of the academic project ofd concern to students and academics in the areas of sociology, social policy, anthropology, psychology, womenÆs studies, family studies, and research methods.
PART ONE: INTRODUCING OUR VOICES
Rosalind Edwards and Jane Ribbens
Public Knowledge, Private Lives, Personal Experience
Jane Ribbens
Hearing My Own Voice? An Autobiographical Discussion of Motherhood
PART ONE: SPEAKING AND LISTENING: REFLECTING MULTILAYERED VOICES
Melanie Mauthner
Bringing Silent Voices into a Public Discourse
Tina Miller
Shifting Layers of Professional, Lay and Personal Narratives
Linda Bell
Public and Private Meanings in Diaries
Janet Parr
Theoretical Voices and Women's Own Voices
PART TWO: HEARING AND REPRESENTATNG: REFLECTING THE PRIVATE IN PUBLIC
Miri Song
Hearing Competing Voices
Natasha Mauthner and Andrea Doucet
Reflections on a Voice-Centred Relational Method
Pam Alldred
Representing Voices in Ethnography and Discourse Analysis
Maxine Birch
Re/constructing Research Narratives
Kay Standing
Writing the Voices of the Less Powerful
Jane Ribbens and Rosalind Edward
Epilogue