University Press of America
Pages: 138
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-5969-7 • Paperback • October 2012 • $43.99 • (£35.00)
978-0-7618-5970-3 • eBook • October 2012 • $41.50 • (£35.00)
Mary Grimley Mason is a professor emerita of English at Emmanuel College and resident scholar at Brandeis University’s Women’s Studies Research Center. She is the author of Life Prints: A Memoir of Healing and Discovery and Working Against Odds: Stories of Disabled Women’s Work Lives. She lives in the Boston area.
Linda Long-Bellil is an assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Medical School where she conducts research and policy analysis on topics related to disability, health, and employment. She also teaches medical students and health professionals how to work effectively with people with disabilities. Her experience as a mother with a disability led to her collaboration on this book.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Disability and the Role of Mothering
Chapter 1 Having a Child: From the Decision Through the Postpartum Experience
Chapter 2 Care Giving and Mothers with Disabilities: The Early Years
Chapter 3 Meeting the Outside World
Chapter 4 Family Relationships and Community
Chapter 5 What Mothers With Disabilities Know
Chapter 6 Public Policy and Mothers with Disabilities by Linda Long-Bellil
Works Cited
Selected Bibliography
The twenty-six life stories of disabled mothers presented in this book are hopeful and sobering. ... As a society, we can and should do more to make this major life function—having and raising children—more accessible and provide more accommodations for people with disabilities. Doctors, nurses, and other health care givers must be better educated about living with disability—and they might as well start by reading this book.
— Biography
. . . . Being a disabled mother is just like being a mother—the hardest and the best thing you’ve ever done. This book speaks volumes about the power of women’s determination to take care of business with love, smarts, and help when you need it.
— Marsha Saxton, research director, World Institute on Disability, University of California, Berkeley
Here she presents the voices of twenty-five women, aged 30 to 75, who speak truth to the power of a society that often views the work of mothering as unsuitable for women with disabilities. . . . Eloquent and accessible, profound and practical, these life stories provide both historical context and a path forward for mothers with disabilities. . . . Taking Care is an enlightened, important, and highly readable book.
— Lauri Umansky, co-editor with Paul K. Longmore, The New Disability History: American Perspectives
I can only imagine how much reassurance, support, and inspiration will come to disabled mothers and their families from these many testimonies. Those who provide care or make policy for disabled mothers and their families are given clear and specific advice about how to improve their practice and with it, their own intelligence and humanity.
— Peggy McIntosh, associate director, Wellesley College Center for Research on Women and author of "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack"