Course Description

This course investigates theories and practices of feminist inquiry across a range of disciplines. Feminist research involves rethinking disciplinary assumptions and methodologies, developing new understandings of what counts as knowledge, seeking alternative ways of understanding the origins of problems/issues, …

This course investigates theories and practices of feminist inquiry across a range of disciplines. Feminist research involves rethinking disciplinary assumptions and methodologies, developing new understandings of what counts as knowledge, seeking alternative ways of understanding the origins of problems/issues, formulating new ways of asking questions and redefining the relationship between subjects and objects of study.

What makes research distinctively feminist lies in the complex connections between epistemologies, methodologies and research methods. This course explores how these connections are formed in the traditional disciplines and raise questions about why they are inadequate and/or problematic for feminist inquiry and what, specifically, are the feminist critiques of these intersections.

This course is part of the Graduate Consortium in Women’s Studies at MIT.

Learning Resource Types
Written Assignments
A woman holds a huge purple banner with the words London Feminist Network written on it.
The London Feminist Network is a women-only feminist networking and campaigning organization based in the UK. Founded in 2004, their mission is to unite London-based feminist groups and individuals in action. (Image courtesy of Mike Atherton on Flickr. Available CC BY-NC-SA.)