Publication | Closed Access
Memory-Work: The Method
197
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
EngineeringComputer ArchitectureCognitionMemory Model (Programming)Feminist InquiryCultural StudiesFeminist Research MethodSocial SciencesFeminist ResearchGender StudiesFeminist KnowledgeQualitative Research MethodMemoryWomen StudiesCognitive ScienceMemory SystemFeminist ScholarshipMemory AnalysisFeminist ScienceComputer ScienceFeminist TheoryFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophyCultureSociologyNew ZealandFeminist MethodLong-term Memory
Memory-work is a social constructionist and feminist research method that was developed in Germany by Frigga Haug and others explicitly to bridge the gap between theory and experience. It provides a way of exploring the process whereby individual women become part of society, and the ways in which women themselves participate in that process of socialization. It is a group method, involving always the collective analysis of individual written memories. It is feminist in being explicitly liberationist in its intent. The use of memory-work as a method in feminist social research has become well established in Australia and New Zealand. Increasingly, its use as a qualitative research method has come to challenge conventional mainstream research practices. However, for feminist researchers too, the method brings with it many fascinating dilemmas and issues of both a theoretical and methodological nature. This article identifies some of those issues.
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