Waubonsee Community College

Unsung heroines, single mothers and the American dream, Ruth Sidel

Label
Unsung heroines, single mothers and the American dream, Ruth Sidel
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-234) and index
resource.governmentPublication
government publication of a state province territory dependency etc
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Unsung heroines
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
60776564
Responsibility statement
Ruth Sidel
Sub title
single mothers and the American dream
Summary
Annotation, Based on interviews with single mothers Sidel offers a corrective to the negative views of this population in the popular mediaAnnotation, This compelling book, written with social insight and political acuity, shatters the derogatory, often hostile stereotypes of single mothers that have too often prevailed in the media and in politics by creating a rich, moving, multidimensional picture of who single women really are. Ruth Sidel interviewed mothers from diverse races, ethnicities, religions, and social classes who became single through divorce, separation, widowhood, or who never married; none had planned to raise children on their own. Weaving together these women's voices with an accessible, cutting-edge sociological and political analysis of single motherhood today, Unsung Heroines introduces a resilient, resourceful, and courageous population of women committed to their families, holding fast to quintessential American values, and creating positive new lives for themselves and their children. What emerges from this penetrating study is a clear message about what all families--two-parent as well as single parent--must have to succeed: decent jobs at a living wage, comprehensive health care, and preschool and after-school care. In a final chapter, Sidel gives a broad political-economic analysis that provides historical background on the way American social policy has evolved and compares the situation in the U.S. to the social policies and ideologies of other countries
Table Of Contents
Moving beyond stigma -- Genuine family values -- Loss -- Resilience, strength, and perseverance -- "Everybody knows my Grandma": extended families and other support networks -- "I have to do something with my life"" derailed dreams -- "I really, really believed he would stick around": conflicting conceptions of commitment -- An agenda for the twenty-first century: caring for all our families
Content
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