黑料社

The Listening Guide – women’s stories

The Listening Guide in Feminist Narrative Research Symposium was organised by Dr Kate Smith and Dr Kelly Lockwood
Pictured (l-r) artist Kani Kamil, Symposium Chair Dr Berenice Golding with speakers Dr Kelly Lockwood, Professor Natasha Mauthner, Dr Kate Smith and Dr Sandra Corlett - (inset) speakers Dr Sophie Alkhaled (left) and Dr Michaela Rogers

The Listening Guide in Feminist Narrative Research Symposium

...organised by  from the 黑料社 and  from the University of Salford

THE Symposium, held recently at the University, brought together feminist scholarship and narrative research to provide a space to explore some of the opportunities and challenges of using the feminist narrative method of data analysis 鈥 the Listening Guide 鈥 for critical understanding and making sense of women鈥檚 stories and lives.

Chaired by  (黑料社), it welcomed three keynote speakers,  (Newcastle University), a founder of the Listening Guide, alongside Dr Smith and Dr Lockwood and was funded by the .

A focus on the history, theory and practice of the Listening Guide laid the foundations for Professor Mauthner to open the event in a talk titled The Listening Guide Feminist Method of Narrative Analysis: Second-wave feminism鈥檚 identity politics and voice-giving project.

Dr Smith and Dr Lockwood explored a retrospective of feminist narrative research that they have developed together over the past decade.  

Delegate feedback...

鈥淛ust to say thank you for organising and delivering yesterday鈥檚 workshop.  I found it very stimulating and useful.  There was much food for thought.  I feel motivated to explore the ideas and develop my work.鈥

The symposium also incorporated practical workshops on using the Listening Guide, which were facilitated by (Lancaster University) and (University of Sheffield).  

A wealth of topics and the multi-disciplinary nature of feminist narrative research was highlighted, including research with women seeking asylum, mothers in prison, female entrepreneurs in Saudi Arabia, trans-women鈥檚 experiences of personal and intimate relationships and domestic abuse. 

A roundtable discussion drew the event to a close with an expert panel including (Newcastle University).

Public Sociology Exhibitions

Central to the success of the Symposium, which welcomed more than 35 delegates, was the launch of two new public sociology exhibitions.  The exhibitions were developed by organisers Dr Kate Smith and Dr Kelly Lockwood, drawing on their respective research of women seeking asylum and mothers in prison.  

The first exhibition, I Poems: Listening to the stories of women, was created using the Listening Guide, as Dr Smith explains.  鈥I-poems remind us to listen to how a woman speaks of herself within her own story and is a part of the narrative turn in social sciences and feminist approaches to research.

鈥淭hrough four sequential readings, the Guide was used to explore the stories of women seeking asylum and mothers in prison and to create the I-poems.  The exhibition honours and values the stories that women tell, whilst inviting the audience to also consider what ideas might have shaped these stories.鈥

Drawing on their research with women held in immigration detention facilities and prison, Dr Smith and Dr Lockwood also worked with artists and to create the second exhibition, Everyday Objects of Carceral Spaces.  

鈥淲e analysed the research data for the everyday objects that women spoke about in relation to their lives in immigration detention or prison,鈥 explained Dr Lockwood.  鈥淎s visual artists, Kamil and Abbas then used the stories to create the exhibition, inscribing the women鈥檚 accounts on to objects.  

鈥淭he exhibition brings attention to the stories of women in prison or detention, which often go unheard by the broader public or authorities.  It also gives space to consider the objects that feature in women鈥檚 stories and what they might tell us about the lives and identities of women in carceral spaces.  Through this exhibition, it is hoped to advance understandings of confinement, imprisonment and immigration detention in relation to the stories of women,鈥 she added.

Delegate feedback

鈥淚 just wanted to say a big thank you for organising such an amazing event.  Your research continues to be fascinating and the exhibition was truly inspiring.  There was a real buzz and everyone I spoke to was thoroughly enjoying it.鈥

The organisers were delighted with the interest in the Symposium, which provided an ideal platform for students and scholars of women鈥檚 studies, feminist and narrative researchers, as well as those looking at social policy and sociology.  Said Dr Smith: 鈥淔eedback from the event confirmed that it not only provided opportunities for networking and discussion, but that it offered a foundation for the development of future ideas and collaboration.鈥

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