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Working against odds : stories of disabled women's work lives / Mary Grimley Mason ; with a foreword by Rosemarie Garland-Thomson.

By: Publication details: Boston : Northeastern University Press, c2004.Description: xiv, 183 p. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 1555536301 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 331.4 22
LOC classification:
  • HV3021.W66 M37 2004
Contents:
PART 1 : THE WAY WE SEE OURSELVES : Debbie: "My disability is not who I am. It's something I happen to have" -- Elaine: "We've lived with this disability all our lives; we know what our bodies feel" -- Virginia: "[This was] "my first inkling of what it was like to have a difference" -- Doris: "A friend said, 'I've always been amazed that you continue to reinvent yourself'" -- Louisa: "I don't have to make an apology" -- Alice: "I have come a long way. I am so proud of myself." PART 2 : THE WAY THE WORLD SEES US : Helen: "You are put into this box" -- Barbara: "You need to know I feel invisible in this room" -- June: "Two worlds colliding" -- Robin: "I don't think any able bodied person really understands what is involved in becoming disabled" -- Eleanor: " I used to shut out hearing people and stay within deaf circles of friends, but I was wrong." -- Carol: "What do you mean there is something wrong with you?" PART 3 :THE WAY WE WORK : Adrienne: "I love going to work" -- Sally: "When I ended up in a wheelchair, I knew absolutely that I had to change my image" -- Kristen: "I just really think that if you have a visible disability and you plan on getting a job, you're not going to get a job" -- Judith: "We need a new definition of work" -- Alicia: "Find your own life work" -- Lauren: "I was a complete workaholic. That's all I did was my business."
Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book NMC Library Stacks HV3021 .W66 M37 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 33039000749910

Includes bibliographical references.

PART 1 : THE WAY WE SEE OURSELVES : Debbie: "My disability is not who I am. It's something I happen to have" -- Elaine: "We've lived with this disability all our lives; we know what our bodies feel" -- Virginia: "[This was] "my first inkling of what it was like to have a difference" -- Doris: "A friend said, 'I've always been amazed that you continue to reinvent yourself'" -- Louisa: "I don't have to make an apology" -- Alice: "I have come a long way. I am so proud of myself." PART 2 : THE WAY THE WORLD SEES US : Helen: "You are put into this box" -- Barbara: "You need to know I feel invisible in this room" -- June: "Two worlds colliding" -- Robin: "I don't think any able bodied person really understands what is involved in becoming disabled" -- Eleanor: " I used to shut out hearing people and stay within deaf circles of friends, but I was wrong." -- Carol: "What do you mean there is something wrong with you?" PART 3 :THE WAY WE WORK : Adrienne: "I love going to work" -- Sally: "When I ended up in a wheelchair, I knew absolutely that I had to change my image" -- Kristen: "I just really think that if you have a visible disability and you plan on getting a job, you're not going to get a job" -- Judith: "We need a new definition of work" -- Alicia: "Find your own life work" -- Lauren: "I was a complete workaholic. That's all I did was my business."

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