Theories of Women's StudiesGloria Bowles, Renate Klein Routledge, 1989 - 277 pages |
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Page 83
... everyday life . In the end , the unmasking of that lie is salutary for two purposes . For women and all the other excluded groups , avenues are opened for the expression and study of our feelings , our experience , our lives . But for ...
... everyday life . In the end , the unmasking of that lie is salutary for two purposes . For women and all the other excluded groups , avenues are opened for the expression and study of our feelings , our experience , our lives . But for ...
Page 192
... everyday life , to living as feminists doing research , and we have written about this in our book , Breaking Out ( 1983 ) . The purpose of this paper is to draw together more succinctly some of our ideas about why and how such links ...
... everyday life , to living as feminists doing research , and we have written about this in our book , Breaking Out ( 1983 ) . The purpose of this paper is to draw together more succinctly some of our ideas about why and how such links ...
Page 206
... everyday knowledge as women , as feminists and as social scientists . It would recognise that each of these is inextricably linked rather than trying to separate off one of these facets of ' us ' within research reports . It would go ...
... everyday knowledge as women , as feminists and as social scientists . It would recognise that each of these is inextricably linked rather than trying to separate off one of these facets of ' us ' within research reports . It would go ...
Table des matières
theories of Womens Studies and the autonomy | 1 |
Theorising about theorising | 27 |
why and how | 46 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Theories of Women's Studies Gloria Bowles,Renate Duelli-Klein,Renate Klein Aucun aperçu disponible - 1983 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
academic discipline Adrienne Rich androcentric approach assumptions autonomous Women's Studies become behavior concepts consciousness course create criticism culture curriculum Dale Spender disci disciplinary discussion ethnomethodology evaluation everyday example existing experience experiential analysis feel feminism feminist methodology feminist perspective feminist research feminist scholars feminist scholarship feminist social feminist theory Gloria Bowles goal human ideas important integrationist intellectual interdisciplinary interest issues knowledge literature male Maria Mies Mary Ritter Beard means methods objective oppression ourselves paradigms Participant Observation participation patriarchal Phenomenology political problem Psychology qualitative data quantitative research questions reality Reinharz relationship research project science-making scientific sexist social science social scientists society sociology sociology of knowledge Stanley strategies structure teaching theoretical Theories of Women's tion traditional disciplines traditional research understanding Westkott women's lives women's movement Women's Studies Association Women's Studies programs York