Oral Narrative Research with Black Women
Collecting Treasures
- Kim Marie Vaz - University of South Florida at Tampa
Courses:
Narrative Research
Narrative Research
June 1997 | 272 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
This book consists of essays on methodological issues by Africana (African and African American) women scholars who have successfully employed oral narrative methods in their research. Some themes covered in these essays are the strengths of oral narrative research for expanding and transforming knowledge about black women and how these scholars learned to conduct oral narrative research; descriptions of the types of narratives they have gathered, the difficulties they have encountered and how these were overcome; and the ethical dilemmas faced while undertaking their research endeavors. What makes this book a valuable teaching tool are the pedagogical suggestions and research artifacts contained within. Contributors have described one or two activities that may assist instructorÆs efforts to teach oral narrative methodologies. Methodological essays about the phenomenological and empirical aspects of carrying out oral narrative research from an Afrafeminist/womanist standpoint are rare and book-length works are almost nonexistent. Oral Narrative Research with black women participates in the growing movement of Afrafeminist/womanist scholarship that fills this void.
This is an insightful, thought-provoking resource for researchers, students, and scholars interested in conducting qualitative research or who want to include black women in their research.
Kim Marie Vaz
Introduction
PART ONE: Ancestor Mothers
Martia Graham Goodson
Ophelia and Me
Joycelyn Moody
Professions of Faith
PART TWO: RESEARCH PROCESSES: GIVING VOICE
Christine Obbo
What Do Women Know?...As I was saying!
Arlene Hambrick
You Haven't Seen Anything Until You Make a Black Woman Mad
Georgia W Brown
Oral History
PART THREE: RESEARCH PROCESSES: HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
Renee T White
Talking about Sex and HIV
Jacqueline A Walcott-McQuigg
Methodological Issues in Triangulation
Claudia J Gollop
Where Have all the Nice Old Ladies Gone?
Elizabeth A Peterson
African American Women and the Emergence of Self-Will
PART FOUR: RESEARCH PROCESSES: NEGOTIATING INSTITUTIONS
Diane D Turner
Reconstructing the History of Musicians' Protective Union Local 274 through Oral Narrative Method
Patricia Green-Powell
Methodological Considerations in Field Research
Kim Marie Vaz
Social Conformity and Social Resistance
Leslie Ann Kingman
European American and African American Men and Women's Valuations of Feminist and Natural Science Methods in Psychology