Join Books.org — it's free

Women - Regional Studies, Women's Studies, United States Studies, Feminism, Ethnic & Minority Studies, Regional Studies
Women's Untold Stories: Breaking Silence, Talking Back, Voicing Complexity by Mary Romero — book cover

Women's Untold Stories: Breaking Silence, Talking Back, Voicing Complexity

by Mary Romero, Abigail J. Stewart
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Honest, vivid, and diverse, the essays collected in Women's Untold Stories reveal women's narratives that have largely gone unheard—stories of women of different ages, races, sexual orientations and ethnicities. These stories are outside the "master narrative", describing experiences that have been suppressed, ignored, or are somehow difficult to tell.
The stories reveal race, class and gender pressures with accounts of a Mexican maid's daughter and a tomboy who breaks gender norms as a "butch" straight woman. Experiences of motherhood and family life are covered with stories of home births, women of color's struggles with infertility, and a mother's side of an incest story. Narratives of women in public life are also included: a scientist's unconventional orientation to her work, a sweatshop worker's advocacy within the workplace, and Japanese-American women who were interned during World War II. And rare portrayals of women who demonstrate remarkable political efficacy appear in this book as well: life-long political activists, a white woman in the civil rights movement, and a Hmong refugee who is a community advocate.
Fascinating and often intense, these women's wide- ranging experiences, contextualized by the contributors, help readers to understand the importance of those women's lives that have been left at the margins of history and politics.

Synopsis

Honest, vivid, and diverse, the essays collected in Women's Untold Stories reveal women's narratives that have largely gone unheard—stories of women of different ages, races, sexual orientations and ethnicities. These stories are outside the "master narrative", describing experiences that have been suppressed, ignored, or are somehow difficult to tell.
The stories reveal race, class and gender pressures with accounts of a Mexican maid's daughter and a tomboy who breaks gender norms as a "butch" straight woman. Experiences of motherhood and family life are covered with stories of home births, women of color's struggles with infertility, and a mother's side of an incest story. Narratives of women in public life are also included: a scientist's unconventional orientation to her work, a sweatshop worker's advocacy within the workplace, and Japanese-American women who were interned during World War II. And rare portrayals of women who demonstrate remarkable political efficacy appear in this book as well: life-long political activists, a white woman in the civil rights movement, and a Hmong refugee who is a community advocate.
Fascinating and often intense, these women's wide- ranging experiences, contextualized by the contributors, help readers to understand the importance of those women's lives that have been left at the margins of history and politics.

About the Author, Mary Romero

Mary Romero, author of Maid in the U.S.A. (Routledge, 1992), is Professor in the School of Justice Studies at Arizona State University. Abigail J. Steward is the coeditor or coauthor of eight books and is Professor of Psychology and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan and is Director of the Institute for Research on Women and Gender

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 1999
Publisher
Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Pages
272
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780415922074

More by Mary Romero

Similar books