More than half of America's wage earners are women, but their role as workers is hotly debated in politics, the press, and most eloquently, among themselves. Everyone has a fixed idea of what a working woman is, and what she wants - or should want. The commandments and the myths pile up: She should be assertive, but not aggressive; and it's her own problem if she can't find a way to have it all - work, family, a personal life. In this timely and powerful book, sixty-five women tell their own stories, the ones hidden behind the hype. Sara Ann Friedman spent five years traveling throughout the United States to speak with all kinds of women, working every imaginable job. She tells about a Latina sewer worker who found handling dangerous machinery easier than batling harassment from the men who work under her, and a nurse who tapped hidden strength as the picket captain of a thirty-nine-day strike. A biologist describes the terrors of isolated field work, and a mother explains why her goat farming business meshes perfectly with raising children. Here are thirty-year-olds making six figures, as well as women who earn less than the cost of day care. They struggle with the anxiety that comes from their own success and power; they ponder the best way to support and promote other women; they fight the pressure to be everything to everyone. Most of all, they strive to find their own space in an institution designed by and for men: the workplace itself. Though their lives and desires vary, these women share a common bond. Work matters to them. It's vital to their sense of self, and not something they do simply to bring in a paycheck. Through their voices - uncensored, pungent, and alive - thisbook speaks of the delicate balancing act between work and family, of the passion to do something of lasting value, and of the far-reaching changes women are making in the once impenetrable masculine domain of work in America.
In this best-selling text BY social workers and FOR social workers, Charles Zastrow and Karen K. Kirst-Ashman, nationally prominent social work educators and authors, guide studetns in assessing and evaluating how individuals function ...
War and State Making: The Shaping of the Global Powers
Charrière , H. 1969. Papillon . Robert Lafont . ... 6 NOT OUR KIND OF GIRL ELAINE BELL KAPLAN Social research is concerned with the definition and assessment of social phenomena . Many social concepts such as teen pregnancy are ...
A very early example of this is the US single play ' The Hospital where a disturbed porter disrupts the power supply to the hospital . It was a CBS / Studio One production broadcast Doctor : Television , Storytelling and Medical Power ( ...
◆1991 年美國政治科學學會 Victoria Schuck 獎 ◆20 世紀最重要的女性主義政治哲學家,《像女孩那樣丟球》作者 Iris Young 代表作 ◆90 年代至今社會運動思想源頭,開創正義理論全新典範 ...
★當代最重要的政治人類學家詹姆斯.斯科特全新著作。 ★顛覆過往對國家與文明成形基本假設,提出今日國家建立的各種想像。 ...
陇者甘肃,历史悠久,文化醇厚。陇上学人,或生于斯长于斯的本地学者,或外来而其学术成就多产于甘肃者。学人是学术活动的主体,就《陇上学人文存》(以下简称《文存》)的 ...
Booth, John. 1985. The End and the Beginning: The Nicaraguan Revolution. Boulder: Westview. Booth, John, and Thomas W. Walker. 1989. Understanding Central America. Boulder: Westview Borge, Tomás. 1984. Carlos, the Dawn Ls No Longer ...
Growing global linkages and complexity are redressing the paradox aptly characterized by sociologist Daniel Bell in the last century , “ government is too big for the small problems of our society and too small for the big ones .
... George W. 318 Neal , Lonnie G. 126 , 312 Nickerson , William J. 11 Nokes , Clarence 121 Page , Lionel F. 356 ... Wanda Anne A. 150 Small , Isadore , III 135 Smart , Brinay 106 Smith , Jonathan S. , II 312 Smith , Morris Leslie 312 ...