Palimpsest: (Re)Reading Women's Lives
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Inquiry
- Vol. 1 (3) , 327-345
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107780049500100304
Abstract
Drawing on the postmodern and feminist critique of positivist notions of subjectivity, knowledge, and representation, this essay explores issues of self-representation in the life-history narratives of three female educators born early in the 20th century. This article focuses on how "double voicedness " functions as a narrative strategy that enables women to express conflicting conceptions of self. By rereading the women's life histories against traditional narratives of teaching, the authors acknowledge the layered mean ings-the palimpsest's surface and deep inscriptions-that form the fabric of women's lives and suggest how their emerging understandings of double voicedness might more deeply attune us to the multiple ways women actively construct, resist, and negotiate a gendered self.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Who's Talking/Who's Talking Back? The Subject of Personal NarrativeSigns: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1993
- Getting SmartPublished by Taylor & Francis ,1991
- NARRATIVE AND SOCIOLOGYJournal of Contemporary Ethnography, 1990
- The Complex Visions of Female Teachers and the Failure of Unionization in the 1930s: An Oral HistoryHistory of Education Quarterly, 1985
- Feminist Criticism of the Social SciencesHarvard Educational Review, 1979
- Literary CriticismSigns: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1975