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From Sesame Workshop senior fellow and digital-age parenting expert
Jordan Shapiro, a thoughtful and long-overdue exploration on
fatherhood and masculinity in the 21st century. There are hundreds
of books on parenting, and with good reason -- becoming a parent is
scary, difficult, and life-changing. But when it comes to books
about parenting identity, rather than the nuts and bolts of raising
children, nearly all are about what it's like to be a mother. If
you're looking for information about what it means to be a father,
you'll find the bookstore shelves surprisingly bare. Drawing on
research in sociology, economics, psychology, cultural history, and
the author's own experiences, FATHER-FIGURE sets out to fill that
gap. It's an exploration of the psychology of fatherhood from an
archetypal perspective (Think: Women Who Run With The Wolves for
fathers) as well a cultural history of fatherhood that explains how
we got to where we are. What are the paradoxes inherent in our
current understanding of dads? Might it be time to rethink some of
the current aspects of fatherhood? Gender norms are changing, and
old economic models are facing disruption. As a result, parenthood
and family life are undergoing an existential transformation. And
yet, the narratives and images of dads available to us are wholly
inadequate for this transition. Victorian and Industrial Age tropes
about fathers not only dominate the media, but also contour most
people's lived experience. FATHER-FIGURE offers a badly-needed
update to our collective understanding of fatherhood -- and
masculinity in general -- that highlights what's essential about
fatherhood while guiding us to an image of manliness reimagined for
the modern world.
IT'S TIME FOR A NEW APPROACH TO SCREEN TIME. Jordan Shapiro
believes we need to rethink parental attitudes to technology.
There's a damaging orthodoxy that presents screen-time as the
ultimate modern parenting evil and the only acceptable response to
it is restriction. Shapiro, psychologist, educational pioneer and
father of two, draws on cutting-edge research in education,
philosophy, neuroscience and psychology to show we've let fear and
nostalgia stand in the way of our children's best interests. In his
optimistic, inspiring and practical guide to the new, digital
frontier of childhood, he reframes gaming, social media and
smartphones to offer fresh, evidence-based advice on how to take a
more progressive approach. *Winner of the Spirituality &
Practice Book Award as one of the 50 Best Spiritual Books of 2018.*
'Shapiro successfully transforms our worst fears about screen time
into excitement about the potential for redesigning childhood
around our latest technologies ... It's a necessary book that I
urge you to read.' - The Telegraph 'Shapiro knows what he's talking
about ... Shapiro's arguments are compelling' - USA Today 'a
thought-provoking, bold read. As a father of two daughters at
similar ages to Jordan's children (7 and 9), facing similar
challenges and dilemmas, the book provided me with an inspiring and
optimistic perspective that's rare in the current media landscape.'
- Variety 'Timely, essential, and thought-provoking, The New
Childhood is the must-read parenting guide for raising 21st
century, digitally driven kids. Instead of raising a white flag and
giving in to social media and the Internet, Jordan Shapiro tells
parents how to embrace technology, stay involved in their
children's lives, and prepare them for their future. Read it! I
promise you'll rethink your parenting. I couldn't put it down' -
Michele Borba, EdD, author of UnSelfie: Why Empathetic Kids Succeed
In Our All-About-Me World
Yoga is so popular. And everyone claims to know what "real" yoga
is? Religion? Exercise? Business? Spirituality? How do we navigate
the tensions between yoga and consumerism? As yogis we want to let
go of attachments, as consumers we want hot designer exercise
clothing. But these things are not as contradictory as they seem.
Buying Dharma is about the way modern postural yoga helps us live
with the contradictions between our rhetoric and our actions.
Jordan Shapiro takes a look at Yoga from a depth psychological
perspective. He offers a brutally honest and sometimes funny
account of yoga in the United States. Ultimately he concludes that
yoga's contradictions are what make it such an effective spiritual
practice for the 21st century.
We are the kids who grew up playing Space Invaders, Frogger,
Q-bert, and Super Mario Brothers. Now, as adults, we're respectable
contributors to a civilized society: professionals, parents,
leaders, and policy makers. Still, the imagery of the games we
played as children remains permanently seared into our personal and
collective unconscious. The game world now shapes the way we think.
It forms the way we perceive and interact with the world around us.
The common view is that video games are an escape from the real
world. But in FREEPLAY, author Jordan Shapiro shows us how the
video games of our past (and present) function as interactive
mythology. They are non-linear stories that help us derive meaning
from the complicated paradoxes of everyday life. FREEPLAY is Zen
and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance for a new generation: part
philosophy, part psychology, part spirituality, but ALL video
games. Shapiro deftly blends Jungian and archetypal psychology in a
way that is accessible and applicable to everyone. FREEPLAY is
philosophy for the life world accessed through the user interface
of the game world. Game on.
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