Title: Assessing the Credibility of Sources
1Assessing the Credibility of Sources
21. Source of Publication
- Books (University Scholarly Presses vs. Popular
Presses) - Journal Articles (Peer Reviewed vs. other)
- Chapters in Books
- Conference Books (Selected papers that are peer
reviewed) - Conference Proceedings (All or selected that
arent peer reviewed) - Final and Technical Reports
3Additional Considerations
- 2. Reputation of Author
- 3. Landmark Works
- 4. Recentness of Publication
45. Type of Research in Relation to Questions Asked
- Empirical
- Historical
- Theoretical
- Textual Analysis
- Personal or Anecdotal
5Reading/Writing Scholarly Introductions
- John Swales Create a Research Space (CARS)
Model - Three Common Moves
- in scholarly introductions
- John Swales, Genre Analysis English in Academic
and Research Settings. Cambridge UP, 1990.
6Move 1 Establishing the Territory
- Step 1 Claiming Centrality of Research
Area and/or the following - Step 2 Making topic generalizations about current
state of knowledge in the area - Step 3 Reviewing prior research (review of
literature)
7Move 2 Establishing a Niche
- Step 2 A Indicating a Gap (in topic/methods/
theories) - OR
- Step 2B Continuing a tradition (extending
knowledge) - OR
- Step 2C Raising Questions
- OR
- Step 2D Counter-Claiming (challenging or
problematizing research)
8Move 3 Occupying the Niche
- Step 3A Outlining Purposes or Announcing main
feature of present research obligatory - Step 3B Announcing principle findings optional
- Step 3C Indicating or Forecasting organization of
the essay not always present but a good idea
9Using Theoretical Frames
- --to guide research questions
- --to guide methodology
10Moving from Questions to Review of Literature and
Research Project
- Initial Research Question
- How might needlework be understood as a literate
practice? - Background reading on scholarship of needlework,
literate practice, rhetorical, literary,
cultural, and textile scholarship on needlework
art/craft scholarship, current discussions about
needlework, museum holdings of needlework
1117th-Century Samplers
- British circa 1600-1630 (VA)
- British circa 1630-1699 (VA)
1218th-Century Samplers
- Jenny Beaman 1736 Sampler (Montague)
- Ann Smith 1767 Sampler (FW Museum)
13Operationalizing Foucaults Theory and Method
- Definition of History History is the
descriptive analysis and theory of various
transformations (Politics 59) - Method I do not question discourses about their
silently intended meanings, but about the fact
and conditions of their manifest appearance not
about the contents which they may conceal, but
about the transformations which they have
effected not about the sense preserved within
them like a perpetual origin, but about the field
where they coexist, reside and disappear
(Politics 60) - Foucault, M. Politics and the Study of
Discourse. The Foucault Effect.
14What transformations should be attended to?
- Within a given discursive formation, detect the
changes which can affect its objects, operations,
concepts and theoretical options - What objects, operations (practices), concepts,
and theoretical options can be identified in the
discursive formation of needlework samplers? - What changes in these do I detect?
15What transformations should be attended to
- 2. Detect changes which affect the discursive
formations themselves. - Displacement of boundaries which define the field
of possible objects - New position and role occupied by speaking
subject in the discourse - New mode of functioning of language with respect
to objects - New form of localization and circulation of
discourse within a society
16Questions of transformation
- Displacement of boundaries which define the field
of possible objects - What are the boundaries within which this
discursive formation (needlework samplers) take
place? Where, under what circumstances, etc. - How have the boundaries changed over time?
- What, if anything, has been displaced for what?
17Questions of transformation
- New position and role occupied by speaking
subject in the discourse - Who are the speaking subjects (needlework sampler
makers)? - What position(s) and role(s) have they occupied?
- In what ways, if any, have these positions and
roles changed?
18What transformations should be attended to
- New mode of functioning of language with respect
to objects - In what ways has the functioning of discourse (or
samplers) changed regarding the discursive
formation of samplers?
19What transformations should be attended to
- New form of localization and circulation of
discourse within a society - Where have samplers been located and circulated?
- Have changes in these occurred? What?
20What transformations should be attended to
- 3. Changes which simultaneously affect several
discursive formations. - Inversion of a diagram hierarchy
- What hierarchical relationships have existed
within which sampler making has participated?
(e.g., in art/craft, word/image) - Change in nature of directing principle
- What change in the nature of directing principle
(creativity) has occurred?