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Innovations in Feminist Psychological Research

Innovations in Feminist Psychological Research

Innovations in Feminist Psychological Research

Ellen B. Kimmel, University of South Florida
Mary Crawford, University of Connecticut
August 2000
Available
Paperback
9780521786409
£33.00
GBP
Paperback

    What are the best ways to do research on the psychology of women and gender? Within feminist psychology, there is a great deal of methodological creativity and diversity. This volume, first published in 2000, highlights how familiar methods such as focus groups can be brought to bear on feminist issues. It demonstrates less common methods, such as Q-sort, phenomenological analysis, concept mapping, and discourse analysis. Moreover, it explores the role of personal values, interpersonal dynamics, and sociopolitical influences on the research process. Over 60 international contributors share insights into adolescent girls' and adult women's sexuality, violence and its prevention, life patterns and narratives, the teaching-research nexus, gender and race in clinical practice, and more. Included is a comprehensive resource guide for research, publication and teaching on methodological diversity.

    • This collection can be used as a textbook for classes in feminist research at graduate/advanced undergraduate levels
    • This volume illustrates a variety of innovative approaches to diverse issues: violence against girls and women, sexuality, life patterns and more
    • Over 60 international contributors and a comprehensive resource guide make this an essential resource for researchers and educators

    Product details

    August 2000
    Paperback
    9780521786409
    482 pages
    228 × 153 × 24 mm
    0.64kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Introduction: feminist research: questions and methods
    • 1. Promoting methodological diversity in feminist research
    • 2. Dimensions of desire: bridging qualitative and quantitative methods in a study of female adolescent sexuality
    • 3. Commentary: eclecticism and methodological pluralism: the way forward for feminist research
    • 4. 'Like chewing gravel': on the experience of analyzing qualitative research findings using a feminist epistemology
    • 5. Commentary: reconstructing mountains from gravel: remembering context in feminist research
    • 6. Concept mapping as a feminist research method: examining the community response to rape
    • 7. Commentary: measuring subjectivities: 'Concept mapping as a feminist research method: examining the community response to rape
    • 8. Fostering rationality when implementing and evaluating a collective-drama approach to preventing violence against women
    • 9. Commentary: power, social change, and the process of feminist research
    • 10. Reflections on a feminist research project: subjectivity and the wish for intimacy and equality
    • 11. Commentary: comments on 'Feminist research process'
    • 12. Batterers' experiences of being violent: a phenomenological study
    • 13. Commentary: existential phenomenology and feminist research: the exploration and exposition of women's lived experiences
    • 14. Beyond the measurement trap: a reconstructed conceptualization and measurement of women battering
    • 15. Commentary: multidimensional assessment of woman battering: commentary on Smith, Smith and Earp
    • 16. Exploring a teaching/research Nexus as a possible site for feminist methodological innovation in psychology
    • 17. Commentary: issues of power and risk at the heart of the teaching/research nexus
    • 18. Focus group: a feminist method
    • 19. Commentary: comments on 'focus groups'
    • 20. Women's perspectives on feminism: a Q-methodological study
    • 21. Commentary: researching subjectivity and diversity: Q-methodology in feminist psychology
    • 22. Keeping and crossing professional and racialized boundaries: implications for feminist practice
    • 23. Commentary: comments on 'Keeping and crossing professional and racialized boundaries'
    • 24. Negotiating the life narrative: a dialogue with an African American social worker
    • 25. Commentary: interpreting the life narrative: race, class, gender, and historical context
    • 26. Understanding graduate women's reentry experiences: case studies of four psychology doctoral students in a midwestern university
    • 27. Commentary: comments on 'Understanding graduate women's reentry experiences'
    • 28. Subject to romance: heterosexual passivity as an obstacle to women initiating condom use
    • 29. Commentary: comments on 'Subject to romance'
    • 30. Fundamentalism in psychological science: the publication manual as 'Bible'
    • 31. Commentary: how often do you read the Bible?
    • 32. Commentary: putting the APA Publication Manual in context
    • 33. Hearing voices: the uses of research and the politics of change
    • 34. Commentary: rattling cages: comments on 'Hearing voices'
    • 35. The view from down here: feminist graduate students consider innovative methodologies
    • 36. Innovative methods: resources for research, publishing and teaching
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Cheryl Brown Travis, Nancy Felipe Russo, Mary Crawford, Ellen Kimmel, Deborah L. Tolman, Laura A. Szalacha, Jane M. Ussher, Elizabeth Merrick, Natalie Porter, Rebecca Campbell, Deborah A. Salem, Stephanie Riger, Community Education Team Wilfred Laurier University, Deborah Mahlstedt, Frances K. Grossman, Lou-Marie Kruger, Roslin P. Moore, Abigail J. Stewart, Alyssa N. Zucker, Ronda Redden Reitz, Michael G. Garko, Paige Hall Smith, Jason B. Smith, Jo Anne L. Earp, Mary Ann Dutton, Ann Weatherall, Hilary M. Lips, Sue Wilkinson, Rhoda K. Unger, Susan J. Snelling, Celia Kitzinger, Gill Aitken, Erica Burman, Christine Griffin, Faith H. McClure, Rosario Ceballo, Karen Fraser Wyche, Marjorie A. Padula, Dana L. Miller, Bernice Lott, Nicola Gavey, Kathryn McPhillips, Jeanne Marecek, Richard Walsh-Bowers, Hope Landrine, Elizabeth A. Klonoff, Glenda M. Russell, Janis S. Bohan, Ruth L. Hall, Sara Jaffee, Kristen C. Kling, E. Ashby Plant, Mathew Sloan, Janet Shibley Hyde, Mary Gergen, Joan C. Chrisler, Alice LoCicero

    • Editors
    • Ellen B. Kimmel , University of South Florida
    • Mary Crawford , University of Connecticut