| Dorothy E. Smith - Literary Criticism - 1987 - 260 pages
...worldview. It does not universalize a particular experience. It is rather a method that, at the outset of inquiry, creates the space for an absent subject,...of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds. In chapter I, I explored issues for women arising from a culture and politics developed almost exclusively... | |
| Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women - Health & Fitness - 1990 - 264 pages
...which, at the outset of inquiry, creates a space for an absent subject and absent experiences which is to be filled with the presence and spoken experience...of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds. (Smith 1987, 3) I want to create such a space for absent subjects and absent experiences. The inquiry... | |
| The Feminist Review Collective - Literary Criticism - 1993 - 124 pages
...position on women's oppression; rather it is, as Dorothy Smith says, a method 'that, at the outset of inquiry, creates the space for an absent subject,...speaking of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds'(Smith, 1988:107). Feminist research over the last twenty years has been characterized by an... | |
| Patricia Potts, Felicity Armstrong, Mary Masterton - Education and state - 1995 - 302 pages
...knowledge, feminist research is characterised by a method which, as Dorothy Smith says, at the outset of inquiry, creates the space for an absent subject,...of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds. (Smith 1988, p. 107) Does disability research do this for disabled people? Most of it clearly does... | |
| Feminist Review Collective - Social Science - 1995 - 176 pages
...assumptions. Dorothy Smith says that feminist research is characterized by a method which, 'at the outset of inquiry, creates the space for an absent subject,...of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds' (Smith, I988: I07). The research on which this article is based was an attempt to 'create the space... | |
| Annette Henry - Education - 1998 - 228 pages
...(Hartsock 1983, 232). 2 Dorothy Smith (1987, 107) explains that, as a method of inquiry, standpoint theory creates the space for an absent subject, and an absent...of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds. Patricia Hill Collins (1990, 15) theorizes "a Black women's standpoint" as "an interpretation of Black... | |
| Gayle Letherby - Social Science - 2003 - 208 pages
...worldview. It does not universalize a particular experience, it is rather a method, that at the outset of inquiry, creates the space for an absent subject,...presence and spoken experience of actual women speaking and in the actualities of their everyday worlds. (Smith 1988: 106-7, emphasis added) Thus, taking a... | |
| Niels Teunis, Gilbert H. Herdt, Richard Parker - Psychology - 2007 - 281 pages
..."standpoint of women." For Smith, women's standpoint is defined as "[a] method that, at the outset of inquiry, creates the space for an absent subject,...of and in the actualities of their everyday worlds" (Smith 1987: 107). This way, if we see Mexican women from their social location as a subordinate group... | |
| |