Posts Tagged ‘Voices’

Women’s Voices From the Vintage Years (Paperback)

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Women's Voices From the Vintage Years

Product Description

Until recently, research on late adulthood has focused on men. This book views the aging process in women age fifty and beyond in their vintage years (so named because people of this age are aging to perfection like vintage wine). Twenty-five women between the ages of 50 and 90 describe their own experiences dealing with the nine developmental tasks typical of late adulthood, revealing the “inner process” of aging not before recognized by researchers in the psychology of late adulthood. The words of these women belie the common belief that aging means catastrophe and endless decline physically and emotionally. The “voices” of these women reveal aging as the full flowering of a process of growth that started at conception.


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This Fine Place So Far from Home: Voices of Academics from the Working Class (Paperback)

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

This Fine Place So Far from Home: Voices of Academics from the Working Class

Review

“A collection of essays by faculty members and several graduate students, this book provides [a] glimpse of the class system in the United States and how it plays out in colleges and universities…[This] is a moving book, beautifully written.” –Contemporary Sociology



Product Description

These autobiographical and analytical essays by a diverse group of professors and graduate students from working-class families reveal an academic world in which “blue-collar work is invisible.” Describing conflict and frustration, the contributors expose a divisive middle-class bias in the university setting. Many talk openly about how little they understood about the hierarchy and processes of higher education, while others explore how their experiences now affect their relationships with their own students. They all have in common the anguish of choosing to hide their working-class background, to keep the language of home out of the classroom and the ideas of school away from home. These startlingly personal stories highlight the fissure between a working-class upbringing and the more privileged values of the institution. C. L. Barney Dews is visiting Assistant Professor of American Literature in the English and Foreign Languages Department, University of West Florida. Carolyn Leste Law is a Doctoral Candidate in English at the University of Minnesota.



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