Home 45 Life Histories
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

45 Life Histories

  • Laura Fenton and Sarah Marie Hall
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

Life histories offer richly detailed and contextualized accounts of lives across different times and places. They hold significant potential for feminist and political geographers to understand the dynamic, intersecting nature of personal and social lives. This chapter examines life histories from the point of view of feminist epistemology and praxis. After situating life histories in feminist concerns about the inseparability of the personal and the political, we address the epistemological and methodological foundations of life history in idiographic and interpretivist traditions, and reiterate earlier calls for the potential of these methods to be used more widely in feminist and political geography. The chapter then outlines widely used definitions and conceptualizations of life history, oral history, and biographical methods, before turning to key considerations involved in the use of narratives and memories in the research process. Lastly, we explore how life history methods might be adapted to allow for more active and creative involvement of research participants.

Abstract

Life histories offer richly detailed and contextualized accounts of lives across different times and places. They hold significant potential for feminist and political geographers to understand the dynamic, intersecting nature of personal and social lives. This chapter examines life histories from the point of view of feminist epistemology and praxis. After situating life histories in feminist concerns about the inseparability of the personal and the political, we address the epistemological and methodological foundations of life history in idiographic and interpretivist traditions, and reiterate earlier calls for the potential of these methods to be used more widely in feminist and political geography. The chapter then outlines widely used definitions and conceptualizations of life history, oral history, and biographical methods, before turning to key considerations involved in the use of narratives and memories in the research process. Lastly, we explore how life history methods might be adapted to allow for more active and creative involvement of research participants.

Downloaded on 11.11.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111289274-046/html
Scroll to top button