Emancipatory Research andComposition Studies: Feminist Postmodern Cultural Studies and Teacher Research Methodologies
Joanne Mary Addison
- School: Purdue University (0183)
- Degree: Ph.D.
- Date: 1995; pp: 123
- Advisor: Sullivan, Patricia
- Source: DAI-A 56/09, p. 3561, Mar 1996
- Subjects: Language, General (0679); Education, Sociology Of (0340); Sociology, Social Structure And Development (0700)
- ProQuest Document Number:
- ISBN:
- UMI Number: AAT 9601457
Abstract:
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This work focuses on developing a theoretical and practical justification within the field of
Composition for the use of emancipatory research in marginalized academic settings; it uses
basic writing as its marginalized site. Broadly understood, emancipatory research is action
based empirical work that is committed to bringing about social change through the empowering
potential of the 'radicalization' of marginalized peoples, or a realization that what is
often constructed as individual failure is actually a socio-political hegemonic construct
that can be acted against. Emancipatory research is action based, grounded theoretically
as a critical and collaborative interaction between researchers and participants, aims to
revise the researcher/researched (or subject/object) relationship, and has important
implications for issues of data analysis, subject representation, reliability and validity,
and future research and pedagogy.
Chapter One outlines the potential importance of emancipatory research to Composition Studies through advocating a view of classrooms as sites of cultural and ideological struggle. It argues that empirical work is needed which not only addresses the political nature of education, but in marginalized sites can also act as a catalyst for change in the lives of the research participants. Chapter Two details the complex relationships that ground this understanding of emancipatory research: (a) feminist postmodernism; (b) cultural studies; and (c) teacher research. Chapter Three focuses on crucial issues of data analysis and subject representation in relation to emancipatory research emphasizing the role of the research participants in these processes. This involves redefining validity and reliability from both a practical and critical hermeneutics perspective, developing efficient means of documenting data sources, and critically examining and redefining the issues of subjectivity, resistance and collaboration from an emancipatory research perspective. Chapter Four addresses the potential uses of emancipatory research in basic writing through linking the work of the previous chapters explicitly to research in the area of basic writing as well as presenting examples of my own preliminary emancipatory research project in an urban basic writing classroom.
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