SubjectsSubjects(version: 945)
Course, academic year 2023/2024
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Power, Reflexivity and Situated Knowledges - YMGS642
Title: Power, Reflexivity and Situated Knowledges
Guaranteed by: Programme Gender Studies (24-KGS)
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities
Actual: from 2023
Semester: summer
E-Credits: 6
Examination process: summer s.:combined
Hours per week, examination: summer s.:0/16, Ex [HS]
Capacity: unknown / 25 (25)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: combined
Teaching methods: combined
Level:  
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
Guarantor: doc. Věra Sokolová, M.A., Ph.D.
Dagmar Lorenz - Meyer, M.A., Ph.D.
Teacher(s): Dagmar Lorenz - Meyer, M.A., Ph.D.
doc. Věra Sokolová, M.A., Ph.D.
Incompatibility : YMGS632
Is incompatible with: YMGS632
Annotation - Czech
Last update: Dagmar Lorenz - Meyer, M.A., Ph.D. (15.01.2022)
This graduate course introduces students to feminist theories of knowledge and the ways in which they propose that researchers situate and account for their research apparatuses, including relations of power and the role of the body and emotions. How does our positionality and research subjects take shape within the processes of research, and how to account for this? What might it mean to decolonize research methodologies and theories of knowledge? How can methods be inventive, artful, and sensitive to the subjugated, inaccessible, and withdrawn? The course discusses established and contemporary feminist texts and case studies that address these enduring questions of power, reflexivity and responsible knowing in practice. Students are encouraged to examine their own research encounters in this light.
Syllabus
Last update: Dagmar Lorenz - Meyer, M.A., Ph.D. (15.01.2022)

a full course syllabus will be distributed at the beginning of the semester.

Key literature

GORDON, Avery (2008) [1997] Ghostly Matters: Haunting and the Sociological Imagination. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota.

ISASI-DIAZ Ada M. and Eduardo MENDIETA (eds.) Decolonizing Epistemologies, New York: Fordham University Press.

HARAWAY, Donna (2018) [1997] Modest_Witness@Second_Millenium. Second Edition. New York: Routledge

LOVELESS, Natalie (ed) (2020) Knowings and Knots: Methodologies and Ecologies in Research-Creation, Edmonton: University of Alberta Press.  

SUBRAIMANIAM, Banu (2014) Ghost Stories for Darwin: The Science of Variation and the Politics of Diversity. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

 

Further literature

BARAD, Karen (1998) ‘Getting real: Technoscientific practices and the materialisation of reality’, differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies 10 (2):87-128.

COLLINS, Patricia Hill (2000) [1990] Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Power of Empowerment, Second edition, New York: Routledge.

DICENTA, Mara (2020) Beavers, Settlers and Scientists. Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

HARDING, Sandra (Ed.) The Feminist Standpoint Theory Reader: Intellectual and Political Controversies. New York: Routledge.

KELLER, Evelyn Fox (1985) Reflection on Gender and Science. New Haven: Yale University Press.

LIBOIRON, Max (2021) Pollution is Colonialism, Durham: Duke University.

 
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