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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."
List(s) this item appears in: Deaf History Month : 03/13-4/15

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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