Ethical and Epistemological Tensions in Applying A Postmodern Perspective to Feminist Research
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Psychology of Women Quarterly
- Vol. 16 (1), 1-15
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-6402.1992.tb00236.x
Abstract
We examine tensions that arise in applying postmodernism to feminist research. First, we consider epistemological tensions generated in the process of deconstructing existing knowledge and constructing new knowledge that benefits women. Second, we examine six ethical issues that reflect the tensions in feminist practice as we attempt to justify the dialectic between knowledge and power. In keeping with a postmodernist perspective, we pose these six issues as questions: Is feminist postmodernism “postfeminist”? Does postmodernist language mystify feminist practice and goals? Are qualitative methods more feminist than quantitative ones? Must feminists have a liberatory purpose in their research? Is the personal too personal? Whose aims are served, feminists or their collaborators? We conclude that by adopting a postmodern feminist perspective, we can embrace the struggle between knowledge and practice rather than privilege one over the other.Keywords
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