- Start
- Worlds of Care
Worlds of Care
Angebote / Angebote:
Worlds of Care is a powerful and admirably candid deep dive into the experiences of men raising kids with significant cognitive and physical disabilities. By blending intimate accounts of his own experiences with insightful ethnographic research, Jackson casts light on a long-neglected realm of human experience."––Steve Silberman, author of NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity "Many men are caring, supporting, championing their children with disabilities. Aaron J. Jackson's warm, rich, and nuanced account provides a welcome window onto their lives and challenges us all to rethink who we are and who we can be."––Tom Shakespeare, Professor of Disability Research at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine "Worlds of Care is the rare book that advances scholarship, addresses significant contemporary issues, and is poignantly personal in a very accessible read. Aaron J. Jackson leverages his experience and ethnographic research on fathers caring for their disabled children to provide compelling analysis regarding the fraught relationship between masculinity and care."––Maurice Hamington, Professor of Philosophy, Portland State University "Worlds of Care draws you deep into the everyday embodied experiences of fathers caring for children with major disabilities in a world that too often turns a blind eye. Richly and reflexively observed, analytically inspiring and utterly moving, this is an ethnographic tale with gravitas that will stay with you."––Tamara Kohn, Professor of Anthropology, University of Melbourne "Intellectually, Jackson provides us with rich phenomenological insights into the experience of fathers bringing up children with profound cognitive disabilities. Moreover, at a personal level, he has given us a perceptive and profoundly moving insight into the disruptions that the care of such children brings to family life."––Bob Simpson, Professor of Anthropology, Durham University, UK
Lieferbar in ca. 10-20 Arbeitstagen