Dear Self: A Year In The Life of A Welfare Mother

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Family Relationships, Parent & Adult Child, Motherhood, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Dear Self: A Year In The Life of A Welfare Mother by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir, NID Publishers
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir ISBN: 1230000216507
Publisher: NID Publishers Publication: December 5, 2013
Imprint: NID Publishers Language: English
Author: Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
ISBN: 1230000216507
Publisher: NID Publishers
Publication: December 5, 2013
Imprint: NID Publishers
Language: English

Dear Self is the penetrating journal of Richelene Mitchell, a young African American mother of seven struggling to raise her children while wrestling with the burden of poverty, callous public policy, and both overt and subtle manifestations of entrenched, institutionalized racism America. Mitchell was born in the rural south, the daughter of an African American sharecropper. She would venture to the northern ghetto of Philadelphia to enhance her educational opportunities. Hence, her early life was shaped by the twin forces defining African America life in the twentieth century: the rural south and the urban north. Mitchell's promising academic career was curtailed by an eventually failed marriage that rendered her a single mother of seven children living in a sprawling public housing project. Forced to deal with the humiliation of public assistance, she chronicled a year of her life, 1973, in this penetrating journal. Though written over twenty years ago, her intimate experience with and intricate insights into the informing and penetrating light on race reality faced by an expanding American underclass are as relevant today as they were then. She sheds light on poverty, mothering, gender relations and many other pertinent issues. This book is a valuable resource for all of those seeking to understand the reality faced by millions of Americans whose plight rarely finds an informed and articulate voice.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Dear Self is the penetrating journal of Richelene Mitchell, a young African American mother of seven struggling to raise her children while wrestling with the burden of poverty, callous public policy, and both overt and subtle manifestations of entrenched, institutionalized racism America. Mitchell was born in the rural south, the daughter of an African American sharecropper. She would venture to the northern ghetto of Philadelphia to enhance her educational opportunities. Hence, her early life was shaped by the twin forces defining African America life in the twentieth century: the rural south and the urban north. Mitchell's promising academic career was curtailed by an eventually failed marriage that rendered her a single mother of seven children living in a sprawling public housing project. Forced to deal with the humiliation of public assistance, she chronicled a year of her life, 1973, in this penetrating journal. Though written over twenty years ago, her intimate experience with and intricate insights into the informing and penetrating light on race reality faced by an expanding American underclass are as relevant today as they were then. She sheds light on poverty, mothering, gender relations and many other pertinent issues. This book is a valuable resource for all of those seeking to understand the reality faced by millions of Americans whose plight rarely finds an informed and articulate voice.

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book Inaugural Addresses: President William McKinleys First Inaugural Address (Illustrated) by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book 《習近平的王者霸氣》 by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Sasha Pieterse 37 Success Facts - Everything you need to know about Sasha Pieterse by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Way To Grow by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Yes, Miss Gibson by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Defiant Spirits by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Black Water by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Norman Rockwell by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Funny Man by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Isaac Brock by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Baghdad Diaries by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book The Life of Nelson, Volumes I-II Complete by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book The Life of an African Peace Corps Child by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book Access Denied by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
Cover of the book The Correspondence of Jeremy Bentham, Volume 1 by Richelene Mitchell, Zaid Shakir
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy