Chapter 1. Feminist Research: Exploring, Interrogating, and
Transforming the Interconnections of Epistemology, Methodology, and
Method - Sharlene Nagy Hesse-Biber
Part 1. Feminist Perspectives on Knowledge Building
Chapter 2. Feminist Empiricism - Catherine E. Hundleby
Chapter 3. Feminist Standpoints - Sandra Harding
Chapter 4. Postmodern, Post-Structural, and Critical Theories -
Susanne Gannon and Bronwyn Davies
Chapter 5. Truth and Truths in Feminist Knowledge Production - Mary
Hawkesworth
Chapter 6. Critical Perspectives on Feminist Epistemology - Noretta
Koertge
Chapter 7. Interconnections and Configurations: Toward a Global
Feminist Ethnography - Kum-Kum Bhavnani and Molly Talcott
Chapter 8. Intersectionality: A Transformative Paradigm in Feminist
Theory and Social Justice - Bonnie Thornton Dill and Marla H.
Kohlman
Part 2. Feminist Research Praxis
Chapter 9. The Synergistic Practice of Theory and Method - Sharlene
Nagy Hesse-Biber and Deborah Piatelli
Chapter 10. Feminist Ethnography: Histories, Challenges, and
Possibilities - Wanda S. Pillow and Cris Mayo
Chapter 11. Feminist Qualitative Interviewing: Experience, Talk,
and Knowledge - Marjorie L. DeVault and Glenda Gross
Chapter 12. Using Survey Research as a Quantitative Method for
Feminist Social Change - Kathi N. Miner, Toby Epstein Jayaratne,
Amanda Pesonen, and Lauren Zurbrugg
Chapter 13. The Link Between Feminist Theory and Methods in
Experimental Research - Sue V. Rosser
Chapter 14. Feminist Evaluation Research - Sharon Brisolara and
Denise Seigart
Chapter 15. Feminist Approaches to Inquiry in the Natural Sciences:
Practices for the Lab - Deboleena Roy
Chapter 16. Participatory Action Research and Feminisms: Social
Inequalities and Transformative Praxis - M. Brinton Lykes and
Rachel M. Hershberg
Chapter 17. Narratives and Numbers: Feminist Multiple Methods
Research - Elizabeth R. Cole and Abigail J. Stewart
Chapter 18. Feminism, Grounded Theory, and Situational Analysis
Revisited - Adele E. Clarke
Chapter 19. Feminist Perspectives on Social Movement Research -
Sarah Maddison and Frances Shaw
Chapter 20. Feminist Research and Activism to Promote Health Equity
- Lynn Weber and Jennifer Castellow
Chapter 21. Joining the Conversation: Social Work Contributions to
Feminist Research - Stephanie Wahab, Ben Anderson-Nathe, and
Christina Gringeri
Chapter 22. Writing Feminist Research - Kathy Charmaz
Chapter 23. Putting Feminist Research Principles Into Practice -
Kristen Intemann
Part 3. Feminist Issues and Insights in Practice and Pedagogy
Chapter 24. Challenges and Strategies in Feminist Knowledge
Building, Pedagogy, and Praxis - Sharlene Nagy Hesse-Biber and
Abigail Brooks
Chapter 25. Authority and Representation in Feminist Research -
Judith Roof
Chapter 26. The Feminism Question in Science: What Does It Mean to
"Do Social Science as a Feminist"? - Alison Wylie
Chapter 27. The Feminist Practice of Holistic Reflexivity -
Sharlene Nagy Hesse-Biber and Deborah Piatelli
Chapter 28. Feminist Research Ethics - Judith Preissle and Yuri
Han
Chapter 29. Transgender, Transsexualism and the Queering of Gender
Identities: Debates for Feminist Research - Katherine Johnson
Chapter 30. Future Directions in Difference Research: Recognizing
and Responding to Difference in the Research Process - Diane
Reay
Chapter 31. Feminizing Global Research/Globalizing Feminist
Research: Methods and Practice Under Globalization - Jennifer
Bickham Mendez and Diane L. Wolf
Chapter 32. From Course to Dis-course: Mainstreaming Feminist,
Pedagogical, Methodological, and Theoretical Perspectives - Debra
Renee Kaufman and Rachel Lewis
Chapter 33. Feminist Pedagogy Reconsidered - Daphne Patai
Chapter 34. Teaching, Techniques, and Technologies of Feminist
Methodology: Online and on the Ground - Debjani Chakravarty, Judith
A. Cook, and Mary Margaret Fonow
Sharlene Nagy Hesse-Biber (PhD, University of Michigan) is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Women’s Studies & Gender Studies Program at Boston College in Massachusetts. She has published widely on the impact of sociocultural factors on women’s body image, including her book Am I Thin Enough Yet? The Cult of Thinness and the Commercialization of Identity, which was selected as one of Choice Magazine’s best academic books for 1996. She has also written widely on methodological and methods issues, including the role of technology and emergent methods in social research. Dr. Hesse-Biber is co-editor of Emergent Methods in Social Research and the Handbook of Emergent Methods, as well as co-author of The Practice of Qualitative Research. She is also editor of the Handbook of Feminist Research: Theory and Praxis, which was selected as one of the Critics’ Choice Award winners by the American Education Studies Association and was also chosen as one of Choice Magazine’s Outstanding Academic titles for 2007. Dr. Hesse-Biber is co-developer of the software program HyperRESEARCH, a computer-assisted program for analyzing qualitative data, and the new transcription tool HyperTRANSCRIBE. For more information, see www.researchware.com.
′The Handbook of Feminist Research: Theory and Praxis is a
well-developed contribution to the body of feminist literature. It
effectively highlights the connection between feminist research and
social change by drawing upon the range of existent feminist
epistemologies, methods, and practices, all of which adopt
different means of conceptualising, researching, and ultimately
representing the lived experiences of women, varied across the
lines of race, class and/or other demographics. The text, while
accessible for both research and teaching purposes, perhaps most
importantly draws our attention to the need to be critically aware
in the process of conducting feminist research. One must address
the challenges, research developments, and, crucially, the
diversity amongst women, that may be incurred in attempting to
research, understand, and accurately represent the lived
experiences of all women′
*Emma Smith*
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