Feminist Research: This Chapter
Feminist Research: This Chapter
Feminist Research: This Chapter
Feminist research
THIS CHAPTER deals with the nature and purpose of feminist research discusses briefly its basic theoretical foundations depicts its major research positions debates its epistemological and methodological position
KEY HEADINGS Introduction The nature of feminist research Principles of feminist research Feminist research positions Feminist research methods Feminist critique of conventional research Is there a feminist epistemology? Is there a feminist methodology? Main points Where to from here? Further reading 54 54 55 57 61 64 66 66 71 71 71
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INTRODUCTION
Feminist research has emerged as a legitimate, relevant and popular research model. Its quality, and the validity of its findings are beyond contention, and over the years it has produced a significant output that has provided guidelines for policies central to modern societies (Roberts, 1981). Its domain is wide and diverse, and so are its basic methodological principles. Feminist research is a type of inquiry that deserves its place in this text not primarily because of the nature of methods it employs or the output it produces but rather because of the manner in which it uses conventional methods, the areas on which it focuses, and the manner in which it employs its findings. In this sense, feminist research is an emancipatory type of inquiry. This means that it not only documents aspects of reality; it also takes a personal, political and engaging stance to the world. In this chapter we shall address the theoretical foundations of this research model, its domain, its nature and diversity, the identity that marks its distinction from other research models, and its epistemological and methodological status. We begin with a brief description of the foundations of feminist research.
1 T H E N AT U R E O F F E M I N I S T R E S E A R C H
The foundations of feminist research are those of critical theory, and hence this research model is critical and emancipatory, and perceives reality, science and research within this context. Briefly, feminist research studies the social conditions of women in a sexist, malestream and patriarchal society (Stanley and Wise, 1983: 12), and enlightens people about taken-for-granted sexist practices and the gender-blindness of government and community practices (including publications) that displaced, ignored and silenced women, led to an unequal and discriminating social order, and held them captive for millennia. Hence, the focus of research that binds together all branches of feminist research is their strong commitment to changing the status of women in modern societies, to studying women, and to employing female feminist researchers: feminist research is research on women, by women and for women. In summary, this emancipatory nature of feminist research is depicted in Box 3.1. It should also be stressed that feminist research is based on the assumption that the world is socially constructed, displays a relative aversion to empirical positivistic methodology, and rejects the value-free nature of research (Haig, 1997; Punch, 2000). Feminist researchers employ a qualitative and/or quantitative methodology, although they adjust the latter to meet the requirements of the feminist paradigm. Beyond its emancipatory endeavour, feminist research is a model guided by sound methodologies and producing valuable and high quality research findings. A combination of a variety of theoretical paradigms, as well as methods and procedures adjusted to comply with feminist principles, are the major factors for this. The major criteria of feminist research are summarised below.
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Box 3.1
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Feminist research:
Is contextual, inclusive, experiential, involved, socially relevant, complete but not necessarily replicable, open to the environment and inclusive of emotions and events as experienced (Nielsen, 1990: 6; Reinharz, 1983).
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These principles are neither clear-cut nor fully accepted by all feminist researchers. An example is objectivity, which obviously is considered to be a part of the identity of empiricist research. Although feminist research rejects objectivity, there are writers who argue that also there is a way of being objective although not of the positivist style. It is argued, for instance, that although positivist principles such as experimental closure (controlling variables in experimentation), detachment, subjectobject dichotomy, and value-neutrality are not accepted, other forms of objectivity are. Examples of objectivity types accepted by some feminists are: dynamic objectivity (Keller, 1985), entailing an emotional bond between the researcher and the subject; openness, where all facts are made known to the respondent, highlighting all contingencies of representation (Harding, 1991); democratic discussion, where all parameters are set out in the open, which encourages cooperation among all researchers as well as criticism from all points of view, and is based on equality of intellectual authority; and anti-sexist practices. Research principles are addressed in various ways, in their own context, and serve the same or similar purposes as in quantitative research.
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Box 3.2
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Feminist empiricism
Employs a realist ontology; a modified objectivist epistemology; a concern for hypothesis testing, explanation, prediction, causeeffect linkages, and conventional benchmarks of rigor, including internal and external validity (Denzin and Lincoln, 1994: 101). Accepts objectivist principles of knowledge creation. Employs traditional social research, modified to avoid bias, sexism etc. and to meet feminist standards. Employs quantitative and qualitative methods. Accepts empiricism critically. Challenges the notion that the person/identity of the researcher has no effect on the quality of the findings (Harding, 1986: 162). Challenges the notion of the adequacy and validity of empirical rules and norms. Challenges the notion that science and politics should be kept apart. Employs traditional research methods. Employs a post-positivist jargon of validity, reliability, credibility and multimethod research strategies (Denzin and Lincoln, 1994). Follows primarily more rigorously the existing rules and principles of the sciences (Harding, 1991: 111). Criticises not so much the foundations of science, but its practice.
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This theoretical and research model lies very close to the traditional feminist paradigm, at least with regard to the position of this paradigm in relation to the traditional objectivist and positivist methodology and the postmodernist paradigm, both of which it rejects. This is the type of feminism and feminist research most feminists accept, and this is the impression non-feminists have of what is presented as feminism in all contexts.
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Feminist postmodernism has been described by writers (Farber, 2001; Haig, 1997: 182; Nicholson, 1990) as an epistemology that is non-foundationalist, contextualist, and non-dualist, or multiplist, in its commitments. It basically rejects epistemological assumptions of modernism, the foundational grounding of knowledge, the universalising claims for the scope of knowledge, and the employment of dualist categories of thought (Haig, 1997: 182). Brieschke (1992: 174) notes that postmodernist feminism has been multi-dimensional, that is, reciprocal and mutual, moving back and forth from self to other(s), concerned with the social structures that enable the self and other(s) to communicate symbolically and intersubjectively. It values and is based upon a sense of connectedness that recognises the interdependent construction of both self and other through different ways of knowing. Philosophically, postmodernist paradigms view rationality itself as a social symbolic construction. Feminist postmodernists are critical not only of conventional research but also of feminist practices, particularly theories of gender and patriarchy, which they consider essentialist (Butler, 1990). They refer particularly to the feminist belief and practice of considering concepts such as women and patriarchy to be universal. Lesbian women and women of colour were the first to raise this issue very strongly, but class and race were equally stressed in the debate. As stated earlier, despite its innovative approach it has not been received as positively as many other feminist branches. Many of the assumptions it makes about social structures and about women as well as science, truth and knowledge Box 3.4
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To reconstruct the research culture and strengthen the effectiveness of feminist research, it was proposed (Farber, 2001; Pfeifer, 2000) that the conduct of research be based on collaborative and non-exploitative relationships, that alienation of researchers from the researched be eliminated, and transformative research be initiated. Accompanying these requirements is the need to set gender at the centre of research as the basic organising principle of research itself and of data analysis and the implementation of findings. The involvement of the researched in the research process has been stressed by many feminist researchers and writers. Box 3.5
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Following these guidelines, the types of research which were considered consistent with feminist research were action research, participatory or collaborative research, needs assessment or prevalence research, evaluation research, and demystification research, where issues and relationships are explained, and the goals of the research are set to be consciousness raising, and emancipating and empowering the oppressed and powerless (Reinharz, 1992: 18094).
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the group then discuss the main issues and identify general trends or themes. Members of the group improvise, reflecting their feelings in their expressions; this is expected to generate further discussion. Genealogy and network tracing. This involves inquiring into a womans history, tracing her relationships, friendships and origin. Non-authoritative and neutral research. Information is collected and presented to the respondent to make sense of. Emphasis is placed on the respondent and on subjectivity. Conversation, dialogue. A conversation involving a number of people discussing a topical issue, some impersonating historical figures, without division into questioners and answerers, is used in this method. Using intuition or writing associatively. This uses a way of blending dreams, reading and thought (Reinharz, 1992: 232), in which the writer appears in a deep non-chronological, non-topical intuitive process; this requires passivity alternating with integration (Reinharz, 1992: 231). Identification instead of keeping distance. The researcher is expected to identify herself with the subjects, display this identification to the reader and encourage the reader to identify with the writer. Studying unplanned personal experience. Personal experience, for example illness or an operation (alone or with additional data), is used as the basis of the study. Structured conceptualisation. This involves recording, analysing and synthesising information related to certain issues, ideas and so on in order to demonstrate how feminists define and understand concepts. Photography or talking-picture technique. This technique involves a collection of pictures taken at certain intervals to be used in an interview kit; subjects choose pictures to be included in the interview kit and file them in the album according to certain categories. Pictures are used in conjunction with
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questionnaires. They can also be analysed and interpreted according to the information they contain, such as sitting order/position, gestures or posture. Speaking freely into a tape recorder or answering long, essay-type questionnaires. This technique involves a set of questions sent to the respondent with the instruction to record the answers on tape.
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It must be kept in mind that when feminist researchers employ methods which were developed by and for other groups of researchers, they adjust them so that they fit within the critical and emancipatory stance of feminism, and they are directed towards breaking down taken-for-granted concepts and rebuilding them into new entities. In so doing they lay bare the essential concepts of the research and use this as the basis for revealing what is really going on (Harvey, 1990: 101, 102, 152).
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Double standards. Here, different standards or instruments are used to measure issues related to males and females. Sex appropriateness. This is a problem derived from the application of double standards and relates to attitudes and expectations that assign behaviour patterns, traits, attributes or roles considered appropriate to a particular gender. Familism. This is a particular case of gender insensitivity and refers to the common practice of referring to families when in fact the issue in question concerns men, women or members of the family; or when, referring to families, it is assumed that all family members are uniformly affected by a particular issue or problem. Sexual dichotomism. This is another example of double standards and refers to practices that tend to consider genders as distinctly separate without considering the interrelationships and interdependence that exist between them.
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For these reasons, most feminist researchers reject conventional research methods and employ other approaches, such as those referred to earlier. Others employ conventional methods but in a different form and context, retaining their advantages but avoiding their weaknesses. Overall, qualitative methods, adequately tailored to feminist standards and expectations, are the ones employed by the majority of feminists. The difference between feminist and non-feminist research lies not in the type of methods they use, but rather in the way they choose, change and use conventional methods to meet their research goals. This point has been made clearer over the years even within the confines of feminist theory and research. A number of feminists have come to realise the power of quantitative research and to appreciate the impact it has had although Box 3.7
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Box 3.8
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the male paradigm and the associated methodology and deserves a place in social methodology as a separate and distinct entity. A feminist methodology places emphasis on women and their position in society and contrasts it with the emphasis on males that prevails in the other methodologies. It explains the world in a unique way (e.g. based on patriarchy), which guides the structure and process of research, the choice and type of methods employed, and the way the results are analysed and interpreted. It sees women as the most appropriate researchers for dealing with womens issues, because only women can truly understand women and their unique position. This is what is generally termed feminist standpoint epistemology (Stanley and Wise, 1983). A feminist methodology is the sum of feminist methods and deserves to be recognised as such (Reinharz, 1992: 240). Feminist research is genuine in that it is marked by seeing reality through a female prism, that it rejects the notion of equating masculine to universal, recognising the central place men have held in social research and lifting the androcentric blinkers to allow a better vision of reality; it also locates the researcher as a gendered being in the web of social relations (Cook and Fonow, 1990). In feminist research, consciousness raising is central not only as a specific research tool but also as a general orientation. Women are in the best position to carry out research on women because, due to their particular position as members of an oppressed group and as scholars, they possess a double vision and are therefore better equipped to identify, understand and interpret
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Despite the validity of these criteria, there is no agreement as to whether they are sufficient to establish and justify the existence of a feminist methodology. The same authors who presented the above criteria note that there is no agreement among feminists about the right methodology, and go on to say that there is in fact no correct feminist methodology; they conclude that at least within the field of sociology, feminist methodology is in the process of becoming and is not yet a fully articulated stance (Cook and Fonow, 1990: 71). This position does not seem to have changed since then. Box 3.9
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Box 3.10
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The question of whether or not a feminist methodology exists has not been answered fully yet (see, for example, Geldsthorpe, 1992; Hammersley, 1992a; Ramazanoglu, 1992); the debate is still alive. Without denying the value, extent and significance of feminist research, at this stage it is reasonable to argue that current developments in feminist theory and practice cannot support a claim for a distinct feminist methodology. Even prominent feminists are against such a proposition (Harding, 1987c). Referring to the differences of opinion within the feminism ranks, and particularly to feminist postmodernists, Harding (1987b: 188) notes that there can never be a feminist science, sociology, anthropology, or epistemology, but only many stories that different women tell about the different knowledge they have. Blaikie (1993: 125), noting this point, comments that in an unstable and incoherent world, the establishment of consistent and coherent theories would be a hindrance to understanding and practice.
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MAIN POINTS WHERE TO FROM HERE?
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Feminist research is an established type of research, which has the specific purpose of studying women and their status in the community. Feminist research is an emancipatory inquiry focusing on enlightenment and on social change. Feminist research employs a variety of methods, adjusted to meet the requirements of the feminist paradigm. There are at least three positions within feminist research; these are feminist standpoint, feminist postmodernism and feminist empiricism. Feminist standpoint stands closer to the mainstream feminist cause than the other two. The three research positions fully cover the range of methodological issues within the feminist paradigm. Feminist research borrows methods and designs from other methodologies, especially of a qualitative nature. There are only a few methods that can be characterised as exclusively feminist. The characteristic of feminist research is not the methods it employs but their application and purpose. The nature of feminist research and the diversity of the paradigm speak against the notion of a feminist epistemology. Feminist research operates within an interpretivist-constructionist paradigm.
Before you leave this chapter, visit the companion website for the third edition of Social Research at http://www.palgrave.com/sociology/sarantakos to review the main concepts introduced in this chapter and to test yourself on the major issues discussed. FURTHER READING Alcoff, L. and Potter, E. (1993) Feminist Epistemologies. London: Routledge. Alcoff, L. (1996) Real Knowing: New Versions of Coherence Epistemology. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Code, L. (1991) What Can She Know? Feminist Theory and the Construction of Knowledge. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Harding, S. (1998) Is Science Multicultural? Postcolonialisms, Feminisms, and Epistemologies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Harding, S. (1991) Whose Science? Whose Knowledge? Thinking from Womens Lives. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Nelson, L. H. (1990) Who Knows: From Quine to a Feminist Empiricism. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Oakley A. (2000) Experiments in Knowing: Gender and Method in the Social Sciences. Cambridge: Polity. Stanley, L. and Wise, S. (1993) Breaking Out Again: Feminist Ontology and Epistemology. London: Routledge.