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What is Critique

Approaches and Processes of Social Science Research
The faculty of our mind to resist the appearance of reality. Research should not simply duplicate reality, it should be able to find out how this reality rests on social relations that are exploitative or unjust.
Published in Chapter:
Critical Theory in Research
Copyright: © 2021 |Pages: 22
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-6622-0.ch004
Abstract
Based on critical theory, this chapter focuses on the first generation of Frankfurt School (mainly to authors such as T.W. Adorno, M. Horkheimer, and W. Benjamin). For discussing methodology in research, these authors are considered more representative than the younger generation (e.g., Habermas and Honneth) mainly because of the renewed interest in the direct critique of society and because of the failure of the younger generation to produce empirical research. The proponents of critical theory establish connections between theory and practice, in the sense that the social content of research must have human dignity at its centre. The difference between method-led and content-led research is discussed and considered central for this kind of approach to empirical research. Feminist research methodologies and critical race methodology are considered as closely associated with critical theory. These different approaches have developed autonomously from critical theory and are not directly related to it. However, feminist research methodologies and critical race methodology are expounded here because of their similarities to the critical theory of the Frankfurt School aimed at providing an emancipatory approach to empirical research.
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More Results
Internationalization of Higher Education: The Methodological Critiques on the Research Related to Study Overseas and International Experience
This term is understood as statements or arguments made to show the weaknesses and provide feedback to something, people, goods, things, or objects.
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Musing on Unanswered Questions
A process described by Yasmin Kafai as the ways in which a learning artifact is analyzed and reviewed in a social context. In the process, connections between old and new knowledge can be made.
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Redefining the Proxemics of the Mentorship
This is the methodological component of critical thinking that both questions tacit ideological assumptions and biases of an intellectual argument or social problem, and subjects them to dialectical mediation by confronting them with their antithesis. Critical thinking is integral to the care of the self for educators and intellectuals and critique the ascetic habit of disciplined scholars and students. Although critique is always situated in a particular socioeconomic milieu, it seeks to suspend or bracket its underlying prejudices, much like the epoché or “reduction” that is the inaugural step in phenomenological research. Often applied to institutions as “ideological critique,” critique is equally indispensable as a tool of critical self-consciousness for clarifying self-understanding and self-determination within a reified institutional context such as college life and social media.
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