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"Illuminating cultural study of single motherhood. . . .
[Juffer] explores the experiences of single mothers across various
social and economic conditions, taking a critical look at current
social policy."
--"Library Journal"
"Juffer points to a new formation--the domestic
intellectual--and in that gesture opens up the concept of the
intellectual to a more complicated theoretical engagement. With it,
she re-imagines marriage, mothering, and the spatial dynamics of
private life, and returns them to a possibly radical and liberatory
space. This powerful and transformative work adds to our
understanding of the value of learning from ordinary life."
--Wahneema Lubiano, Duke University
Long perceived as the ultimate symbol of social breakdown and
sexual irresponsibility, the single mother is now, in the context
of welfare-to-work policies, often hailed as the new spokesperson
for hard work and self-sufficiency. A dozen years after Dan Quayle
denounced the television character Murphy Brown for making the
decision to become a single mother "just another lifestyle choice,"
President George W. Bush applauded single mothers for "heroic
work," and positive on-screen representations of single mothers
abound, from "The Gilmore Girls" to "Sex and the City" to "American
Idol,"
Single Mother describes the recent cultural valorization of this
figure that--in the midst of demographic changes in the U.S.--has
emerged as the unlikely heroic and seductive voice of the new
American family. Drawing on her own life as a single mother,
interviews with dozens of other single mothers, cultural
representations, and policies on welfare, immigration, childcare,
and child custody, Juffer analyzes this contingent acceptance of
single mothers. Finally, critiquing the relentless emphasis on
self-sufficiency to the exclusion of community, Juffer shows the
remarkable organizing skills of these new mothers of invention. At
a moment when one-third of all babies are born to single moms,
Single Mother is a fascinating and necessary examination of these
new "domestic intellectuals."
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