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This collection of memoirs examines the relationship between
daughters with academic degrees and their working-class parents.
Each contributor explores the influence that higher education has
had on her relationship with her parent(s), as well as their
influence on her academic work. In writing that is akin to
archeological work, each writer sifts through layers of experience
and draws on the lessons and language of home to consider what
working-class parents provide beyond food and shelter for their
academically inclined child, and what personal cost is exacted of
parent and child in the process. Their stories provoke anyone who
has gone to college - woman or man - to consider the influence of
their parents on their academic career. The themes in the
collection fall into five broad categories: the value and power of
bringing the lessons and language of working-class parents into the
academy; the psychology of class learned from a parent; the
ambivalence of love and pain associated with a parent's sacrifice
and the process of becoming an academic; the balancing act of
straddling the worlds of academia and home; and definitions of work
that either complement or conflict with those learned from parents.
The memoirs acknowledge in retrospect how each writer's
understanding of her parent(s) shapes her views on education and
work.
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Paperback
(2)
R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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