1st Edition

Transdisciplinary Feminist Research Innovations in Theory, Method and Practice

    276 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    276 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    What is feminist transdisciplinary research? Why is it important? How do we do it? Through 19 contributions from leading international feminist scholars, this book provides new insights into activating transdisciplinary feminist theories, methods and practices in original, creative and exciting ways – ways that make a difference both to what research is and does, and to what counts as knowledge. The contributors draw on their own original research and engage an impressive array of contemporary theorising – including new materialism, decolonialism, critical disability studies, historical analyses, Black, Indigenous and Latina Feminisms, queer feminisms, Womanist Methodologies, trans studies, arts-based research, philosophy, spirituality, science studies and sports studies – to trouble traditional conceptions of research, method and praxis. The authors show how working beyond disciplinary boundaries, and integrating insights from different disciplines to produce new knowledge, can prompt important new transdisciplinarity thinking and activism in relation to ongoing feminist concerns about knowledge, power and gender. In doing so, the book attends to the multiple lineages of feminist theory and practice and seeks to bring these historical differences and intersections into play with current changes, challenges and opportunities in feminism. The book’s practically-grounded examples and wide-ranging theoretical orbit are likely to make it an invaluable resource for established scholars and emerging researchers in the social sciences, arts, humanities, education and beyond.

    List of Figures
    Acknowledgements

    Contributors

    1. Introduction

    Christina Hughes

    2. Walking as trans(disciplinary)mattering: A speculative musing on acts of feminist indiscipline

    Carol A. Taylor

    3. Critical disability studies and the problem of method

    Ada S. Jaarsma

    4. Historical interludes: The productive uncertainty of feminist transdisciplinarity

    Asilia Franklin-Phipps

    5. Powerful dressing: Artfully challenging sexism in the academy

    Linda Knight, Emily Gray and Mindy Blaise

    6. Listening to water: Situated dialogues between Black, Indigenous and Black-Indigenous feminisms

    Fikile Nxumalo and Marleen Villanueva

    7. The bathroom polemic: Addressing the ethical and political significance of transgender informed epistemologies for feminist transdisciplinary inquiry

    Wayne Martino and Jennifer Ingrey

    8. Performance practice and eco-feminism: A diffractive approach for a transdisciplinary pedagogy

    Cara Berger

    9. Living in the hyphens: Between a here, a there, and an elsewhere

    Veena Balsawer

    10. Caster Semenya: The surveillance of sportswomen’s bodies, feminism and transdisciplinary research

    Belinda Wheaton, Louise Mansfield, Jayne Caudwell, Rebecca Watson

    11. Womanist and Chicana/Latina feminist methodologies: Contemplations on the spiritual dimensions of research

    Michelle Salazar Pérez & Cinthya M. Saavedra

    12. Hear me roar: Sound feminisms and qualitative methodologies

    Walter S. Gershon

    13. Inter(r)uptions: Reimagining dialogue, justice, and healing

    Anjana Raghavan

    14. Moving with the folds of time and place: exploring gut reactions in speculative transdisciplinary research with teen girls’ in a post-industrial community

    Gabrielle Ivinson and Emma Renold

    15. Transition states: Chemistry educators engaging with and being challenged by matter, materiality and what may come to be

    Kathryn Scantlebury, Anita Hussénius and Catherine Milne

    16. Embodying critical arts-based research: Complicating thought/thot leaders through transdisciplinary discourse

    Gloria J. Wilson

    17. (Un)disciplined: What is the terrain of my thinking?

    Susan Naomi Nordstrom

    18. Sex: A transdisciplinary concept

    Stella Sandford

    19. Conclusion: The rusty futures of transdisciplinary feminism

    Jasmine B. Ulmer

    Index

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Biography

    Carol A. Taylor is Professor of Higher Education and Gender, and Director of Research (Department of Education) at the University of Bath. Carol’s research focuses on the entangled relations of knowledge–power–gender–space–ethics, and utilises feminist, new materialist and posthumanist theories and methodologies to explore gendered inequalities, spatial practices and staff and students’ participation in a range of higher education sites. Her latest co-edited books are Posthumanism and Higher Education: Reimagining Pedagogy, Practice and Research (2019, with A. Bayley), and Gender in Learning and Teaching: Feminist Dialogues across International Boundaries (2019, with A. Abbas and C. Amade-Escot). Carol is co-editor of the journal Gender and Education and serves on the Editorial Boards of Teaching in Higher Education and Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning. Carol’s work is widely published in international journals.

    Christina Hughes is Professor of Women and Gender Studies and has worked at the Universities of Warwick, Sheffield Hallam and Kent. She is a Visiting Professor at the University of Coventry. Her research career began with a participant observation study of stepfamilies and has included issues related to employment, career and education. She also has longstanding interests in research methodologies. Her edited books include Researching Gender (2013), Posthuman Research Practices in Education (2016, with Carol A. Taylor), and International Perspectives of Learning Gain (2020, with Malcolm Tight).

    Jasmine B. Ulmer, PhD, is Assistant Professor at Wayne State University in Detroit. Within the College of Education, she teaches and directs the doctoral track in qualitative inquiry. Her programme of research develops inclusive inquiry methodologies and pedagogies. She locates her work at the intersection of qualitative inquiry and visual communications, aiming to foster a more diverse, inclusive, peaceful world. Prior to entering post-secondary education, she served as an instructional coach, National Board Certified Teacher, and classroom policy fellow at the United States Department of Education. She has been recognised with the Early Career Award from the measurement and research division of the American Educational Research Association. She has also been a Wayne State University Humanities Center Faculty Fellow and Visiting Scholar at Ghent University in Belgium.