posted on 2010-11-12, 10:27authored byElizabeth A. Barrett
The intention of this thesis is to examine representations of gender and
gender roles in a variety of discursive situations, using the methodology of
discourse analysis (a systematic method of investigating natural language
data).
Within this brief, the aims of the research are twofold. Firstly, I wish to
provide a criti9ue, informed by discourse analysis, of several of the major
approaches which have been used in the study of gender in the social
sciences. To this end, the text contains critical reviews of the sex —
stereotypes literature (as epitomised in the work of Sandra Bern), the study
of female moral development (as envisaged by Carol Gilligan) and the
psychoanalytic perspective (represented by Nancy Chodorow and Karen
Homey). In addition to the above, I shall also look at some recent trends
in gender research, considering developments deriving from psychoanalytic
theory, deconstructionism, poststructuralism and social identity theory. The
theoretical aspect of the thesis will be concluded with a section on issues
of language, methodology and ideology.
The second aim of the research is to conduct a study of the practical
application of discourse analysis. A number of pilot interviews and the
review essays delineated three areas as important: women's conceptions of
social change; images of gender in everyday discourse; the female self —
concept. Each of the three empirical chapters will consider one of these
topics, comparing the expectations of existing social psychological work to
the findings generated through the discourse analysis of the data.
The conclusion of the thesis is that discourse analysis is a particularly
useful methodology for considering data of the type presented in this
project, as it circumvents many of the problems encountered by more
traditional social psychological research methods.