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Showing 1 - 22 of
22 matches in All Departments
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Norwalk (Hardcover)
Lisa Wilson Grant
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R781
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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How many people live in poverty in the UK, and how has this changed
over recent decades? Are those in poverty more likely to suffer
other forms of disadvantage or social exclusion? Is exclusion
multi-dimensional, taking different forms for different groups or
places? Based on the largest UK study of its kind ever
commissioned, this fascinating book provides the most detailed
national picture of these problems. Chapters consider a range of
dimensions of disadvantage as well as poverty - access to local
services or employment, social relations or civic participation,
health and well-being. The book also explores relationships between
these in the first truly multi-dimensional analysis of exclusion.
Written by leading academics, this is an authoritative account of
welfare outcomes achieved across the UK. A companion volume Poverty
and Social Exclusion in the UK: Volume 1 focuses on specific groups
such as children or older people, and different geographical areas.
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Rykte
Lisa Wilson
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R721
Discovery Miles 7 210
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Stepfamilies are not a modern phenomenon, but despite this reality,
the history of stepfamilies in America has yet to be fully
explored. In the first book-length work on the topic, Lisa Wilson
examines the stereotypes and actualities of colonial stepfamilies
and reveals them to be important factors in early United States
domestic history. Remarriage was a necessity in this era, when war
and disease took a heavy toll all too often led to domestic stress,
and cultural views of stepfamilies during this time placed great
strain on stepmothers and stepfathers. Both were seen as either
unfit substitutes or as potentially unstable influences, and
nowhere were these concerns stronger than in white middle-class
families, for whom stepparents presented a paradox.
Wilson shares the stories of real stepfamilies in early New
England, investigating the relationship between prejudice and lived
experience, and, in the end, offers a new way of looking at family
units throughout history and the cultural stereotypes that still
affect stepfamilies today.
This fascinating book is the first to investigate the everyday
lives of men in prerevolutionary America. It looks at men and women
in colonial Massachusetts and Connecticut, comparing their
experiences in order to understand the domestic environment in
which they spent most of their time. Lisa Wilson tells wonderful
stories of colonial New England men, addressing the challenges of
youth, the responsibilities of adulthood, and the trials of aging.
She finds that ideas about patriarchy or nineteenth-century notions
of separate spheres for men and women fail to explain the world
that these early New England men describe. Patriarchal power,
although certainly real enough, was tempered by notions of
obligation, duty, and affection. These men created their identities
in a multigendered, domestic world. A man was defined by his
usefulness in this domestic context; as part of an interdependent
family, his goal was service to family and community, not the
self-reliant independence of the next century's "self-made" man.
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John David Washington, Robert Pattinson
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R52
Discovery Miles 520
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