1st Edition
The Routledge International Handbook on The Listening Guide Method A Feminist Relational Approach
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgement
About the Editors
Notes on Contributors
Introducing the Routledge International Handbook on the Listening Guide
PART I: Histories
Chapter 1: Brown, L. M. and Gilligan, C. (1993). Meeting at the crossroads: Women’s psychology and girls’ development. Feminism & Psychology, 3(1), 11-35.
Chapter 2: Gilligan, C., Spencer, R., Weinberg, M. K., & Bertsch, T. (2003). On the listening guide: A voice-centered relational model. In P. M. Camic, J. F. Rhodes, & L. Yardley (Eds.), Qualitative research in psychology: Expanding perspectives in methodology and design (pp. 157-172). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Chapter 3: Mauthner, N. S., & Doucet, A. (2003). Reflexive accounts and accounts of reflexivity in qualitative data analysis. Sociology, 37(3), 413-431.
Chapter 4: Gilligan, C. (2015). The listening guide method of psychological inquiry. Qualitative Psychology, 2(1), 69-77.
PART II: Innovations and Adaptations
Chapter 5: Jacqueline Cruz: Asking a Real Question: Embracing Subjectivity
Chapter 6: Tonya Leslie: “You Becoming”: Voice, Resilience, and Becoming in the Narratives of First-Year STEM Students
Chapter 7: Leoandra Onnie Rogers: A Guiding Light: Using the Listening Guide to Study Identity Development in the United States
Chapter 8: Xanthia Hargreaves: Applying the Listening Guide Method to Legal Research
Chapter 9: Lori Koelsch: I Poems: Where Psychology and Arts-Based Practices Intersect
Chapter 10: Sarah Mountz & LeConte Dill: Embodied Listening: Innovative Adaptations to The Listening Guide
Chapter 11: Claire Fontaine: Reflections on Adapting the Listening Guide to Program Evaluation
Chapter 12: Eva Jewell, Andrea Doucet, & Jessica Falk: Remaking the Listening Guide in Canadian Indigenous Contexts: Care Processes, Practices, Provocations
Chapter 13: Lucy Delgado: Being and Becoming Relations: The Listening Guide as part of a queer Métis research practice
Chapter 14: Rachelle Chadwick: Hearing the Body in the Story: The Listening Guide as a Tool of Embodied Inquiry
Chapter 15: Natasha Mauthner & Sophie Alkhaled: Towards Decolonising the Listening Guide: A Study of Women entrepreneurs in Non-Western Contexts
Chapter 16: Shir Daphna-Tekoah & Ayelet Harel: Listening to Women in Conflict Situations: Implementation of the Listening Guide
Chapter 17: Anne Hultzsch & Sol Pérez Martínez: The Listening-With and Reading-With Guides: Transferring the Listening Guide to Architectural Histories
Chapter 18: Laura Kounine: Applying the Listening Guide to Historical Sources
Part III: Methodological Journeys
Chapter 19: Dana Jack: The Relational Voice-Centered Method: Its Continuity and Adaptations Over Four Decades
Chapter 20: Tamara Beauboeuf-Lafontant & Mechthild Kiegelmann: Listening for the We: Thirty Years of a Friendship and Lessons in Hearing Social Contexts in Qualitative Data
Chapter 21: Brittany Arthur, Sydney O’Connor & Miriam Raider-Roth: Collective Listening: The Listening Guide as a Participatory Method
Chapter 22: Tova Hartman: Devoted Resistance: The Listening Guide as a Method for Revealing Cultural Critique
Chapter 23: Deborah Tolman: The Listening Guide as a Way to Unearth a Psychological Path to Redress Social Injustices
Chapter 24: Joseph Nelson & Niobe Way: Getting into the Thick of It: Teaching Transformative Interviewing Research Methods
Chapter 25: Andrea Doucet: The Listening Guide as a Care Ethics Method: Listening with Care and Response-abilities
Chapter 26: Natasha Mauthner: Diffractive Listening: Remaking the Listening Guide into a Posthumanist Performative Method
Chapter 27: Carol Gilligan, Natasha Mauthner, and Andrea Doucet: Our Listening Guide Journeys
Index
Biography
Carol Gilligan is a Professor of Humanities and Applied Psychology at New York University and was a Visiting Professor at the Centre for Gender Studies and Jesus College at the University of Cambridge until 2009. She was a member of the Harvard faculty for over 30 years and held the University’s first chair in Gender Studies. Along with Lyn Mikel Brown and students and colleagues at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, she developed The Listening Guide.
Natasha Mauthner is a Professor of Social Science Philosophy and Method at Newcastle University, where she founded the Methods Hub in 2020. She previously worked at the Universities of Edinburgh and Aberdeen. She and Andrea Doucet learned the Listening Guide from Carol Gilligan as doctoral students at the University of Cambridge. Natasha later co-taught the method with Carol Gilligan at Harvard University. Her experiences using and teaching the Listening Guide in non-Western contexts have led her to reconceptualise the method through feminist posthumanist and post/decolonial frameworks.
Andrea Doucet is a Distinguished Professor in Sociology and Women's and Gender Studies at Brock University, Honorary Professor at University College London, and a former Canada Research Chair in Gender, Work, and Care. She and Natasha Mauthner learned the Listening Guide from Carol Gilligan during their doctoral studies at the University of Cambridge and later collaborated to develop it further. Her work in ecological and feminist epistemologies, feminist care ethics, and Indigenous community-based research underpin her current writing on the Listening Guide as a care ethics method.






