The Poverty of Life-Affirming Work: Motherwork, Education, and Social Change

The Poverty of Life-Affirming Work: Motherwork, Education, and Social Change

by Mechthild Hart
ISBN-10:
0313317763
ISBN-13:
9780313317767
Pub. Date:
12/30/2001
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
0313317763
ISBN-13:
9780313317767
Pub. Date:
12/30/2001
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
The Poverty of Life-Affirming Work: Motherwork, Education, and Social Change

The Poverty of Life-Affirming Work: Motherwork, Education, and Social Change

by Mechthild Hart

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Overview

While society may applaud middle and upper class women who decide to stay home to raise their children, there exists a decided abhorrence for single mothers, welfare queens, who collect public funds but do not work. Here, Hart challenges traditional notions of welfare mothers by providing first-hand accounts of poor urban mothers and revealing the life-affirming and moral aspects of their motherwork—a form of subsistence work, involving many tasks that incorporate the physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual dimensions of life. Though the mothering work these women do is vilified in public discourse as unnecessary and unwanted, the author contends that the ethical and epistemological dimensions of life-affirming work—a key component of motherwork—not only structure social-political activism but also educational efforts that are oriented towards radical change. Concrete experiences of motherwork, policy analyses regarding welfare reform, efforts oriented towards educational and epistemological border-crossings, and collective struggles for social change are examined here in a larger theoretical, political-economic framework.

Pulling together the many strands of different theoretical fields addressing issues related to critical/transformative pedagogy, community activism, and forms of unpaid work, this unique work calls for the unlearning of ways of thinking and feeling which uphold prejudices and life-threatening social-political hierarchies. While the public may sneer at women who choose to accept welfare in order to stay home to raise their children, these mothers must continue to perform this invisible work in order that their children may break the cycle of poverty in which they are entrenched. The author examines ways in which these mothers organize and carry out educational efforts and political work in the context of extreme poverty and against the harsh criticisms of an unforgiving public. Ultimately, Hart hopes to convince the public of the inherent importance of motherwork and break down the prejudices that have worked against the urban poor and single mothers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313317767
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/30/2001
Series: Contributions in Women's Studies , #194
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

MECHTHILD U. HART is Associate Professor at the School for New Learning, DePaul University. Her teaching and writing has focused on motherwork within the larger political and economic context of sexual, racial-ethnic, and international divisions of labor. She also works in the area of educational theory, where she concentrates on the political and pedagogical implications of educational practices that are anchored in an acknowledgment of life-affirming work.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
The War Against Subsistence
"I Ache When I Think of My Children": Raising Children in Chicago's Public Housing
Welfare Mothers: Invisible Work Becoming Visible—And Invisible Again
Literacy and Motherwork
Teaching and Learning as a Political Ally
Creating and Sustaining Life and Community
Conclusions
References
Index

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