University Press of America
Pages: 352
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-3636-0 • Paperback • September 2007 • $69.99 • (£54.00)
Otrude N. Moyo, Ph. D. is an Assistant Professor at the University of Southern Maine. She teaches social welfare policy and critical multicultural practices. Her work on the subject of this book has appeared as articles in the journals: Feminist Economics, Social Development Issues and International and Comparative Social Welfare.
Part 1 Acknowledgements
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 Ancestors: We, Too, Are People!
Chapter 4 Soldiering on: Rambayi Makashinga!
Chapter 5 The Born Frees: Families and Livlihoods Reconstituted by Transnational Migration
Chapter 6 Conclusion
Part 7 Appendixes
Part 8 Glossary of Foreign Terms
Part 9 Bibliography
Part 10 Index
Dr. Moyo persusasively argues for the use of biographical narration and varieties of story telling to get at important information about the social structure, self-perception and therefore possibility for household, community, and social policy change in these areas [Zimbabwe and its townships] and by extension possibly in other parts of Africa. The introductory material describes how Dr. Moyo has developed as a participant observer who brings new things to her perceptions of her culture as she becomes increasingly a person of two worlds, a scholar looking from the outside and a daughter of the area with a history and connections which are intensely personal. This puts her in a privileged relation to her subjects, but her current distance also supplies the new questions which this book begins to address.
— Kathleen J. Wininger, Professor of Philosophy, University of Southern Maine