Thursday, November 14, 2019
Spring 2005 :: essays research papers
à à à à à à à à à à In the first section of essays the authors discuss how and why feminist scholars do research is grappled with in each selection. The authors/feminist scholars discuss the importance of research and methodology. à à à à à à à à à à Sandra Harding asserts in her essay, ââ¬Å"Is There a Feminist Method?â⬠Harding argues that it is ââ¬Å"difficult to define a distinct feminist method because method and methodology have been intertwined with each other and with epistemological issues.â⬠(2) Moreover, it is, she argues difficult and potentially dangerous to identify anything as a distinctive methodââ¬âher argument is that ââ¬Å" it is not by looking at research methods that one will be able to identify distinctive features of the best feminist research methods.â⬠In other words it is dangerous to mystify feminist research because it locks researchers, students, scholars and critics into rules and ideas that donââ¬â¢t necessarily encompass all facets of feminist scholarship and the efforts that are made to understand it. à à à à à The idea of there being a single ââ¬Å"feminist methodâ⬠assumes that there is a single thing, or several concrete things/ideas feminist scholars must be searching for. Hardingââ¬â¢s argument is supported by authorââ¬â¢s Greene, Khan in ââ¬Å"Feminist scholarship and the social construction of womenâ⬠. Greene/Khan assertââ¬âthat ââ¬Å"feminist scholarship undertakes the dual task of deconstructing predominately male cultural paradigms and reconstructing a female perspective and experience in an effort to change the tradition that has silenced and marginalized usâ⬠¦feminist scholars work to expose and the collusion between ideology and cultural practices.â⬠(1) She asserts that there are two premises about gender, the first is, ââ¬Å"the inequality of the sexes is neither a biological given nor a divine mandate, but a cultural construct,â⬠and the second is, ââ¬Å"the male perspective has dominated fields of knowledge shaping their paradigms and methods.â⬠Here the authors are illustrating the constraints ideology and methodology place on feminist research and substantiating the claim that ideology and methodology are emblems of constraint in the feminist discipline because of their universal assumptions and dependence on the paradigm for the purposes of legitimizing their claims. The authors, Greene, Khan, Harding, and Cannon all deal with the issue of being tied down to methodology and method that would define feminist work, and solidify its direction while at the same time not allowing it to be fluid enough to evolve as a legitimate academic discipline. à à à à à As it the issue is raised in ââ¬Å"Race and Class Bias in
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