shopping cart
nothing in cart
 
browse by subject
new releases
best sellers
sale books
browse by author
browse by publisher
home
about us
upcoming events
Mar 23rd - Navigating the Nervous System: A Polyvagal Approach to Working with Complex Trauma [Centre for MindBody Health]
Mar 24th - Working with 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in a Clinical Setting [OAMHP]
Mar 24th - Foundations of Africentric Social Work [OASW]
Mar 27th - 8 Week Mindful Self-Compassion Program [Centre for MindBody Health]
Mar 27th - Trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy: Blending theory with innovative techniques [SickKids CCMH Learning Institute]
schools agencies and other institutional orders (click here)
Open for browsing 9-6 Mon-Sat and 12-5 Sunday. Free shipping across Canada for orders over $150. Please read our Covid-19 statement here.
Join our mailing list! Click here to sign up.
Raising Their Voices : The Politics of Girls' Anger
Lyn Mikel Brown
Harvard University Press / Softcover / Oct 1999
9780674747210 (ISBN-10: 0674747216)
Women's Issues
price: $57.75 (may be subject to change)
259 pages
Not in Stock, usually ships in 3-4 weeks

Two fourteen-year-old girls, fed up with the "Hooters" shirts worn by their male classmates, design their own rooster logo: "Cocks: Nothing to crow about." Seventeen-year-old April Schuldt, unmarried, pregnant, and cheated out of her election as homecoming queen by squeamish school administrators, disrupts a pep rally with a protest that engages the whole school.

Where are spirited girls like these in the popular accounts of teenage girlhood, that supposed wasteland of depression, low self-esteem, and passive victimhood? This book, filled with the voices of teenage girls, corrects the misperceptions that have crept into our picture of female adolescence. Based on the author's yearlong conversation with white junior-high and middle-school girls--from the working poor and the middle class--Raising Their Voices allows us to hear how girls adopt some expectations about gender but strenuously resist others, how they use traditionally feminine means to maintain their independence, and how they recognize and resist pressures to ignore their own needs and wishes.

With a psychologist's sensitivity and an anthropologist's attention to cultural variations, Lyn Brown makes provocative observations about individual differences in the girls' experiences and attitudes, and shows how their voices are shaped and constrained by class--with working- class girls more willing to be openly angry than their middle-class peers, and yet more likely to denigrate themselves and attribute their failures to personal weakness.

A compelling and timely corrective to conventional wisdom, this book attunes our hearing to the true voices of teenage girls: determined, confused, amusing, touching, feisty, and clear.

from the publisher's website

see also by the same author Meeting at the Crossroads

Caversham Booksellers
98 Harbord St, Toronto, ON M5S 1G6 Canada
(click for map and directions)
All prices in $cdn
Copyright 2022

Phone toll-free (800) 361-6120
Tel (416) 944-0962 | Fax (416) 944-0963
E-mail [email protected]
Hours: 9-6 Mon-Sat / Sunday 12-5 (EST)

search
Click here to read previous issues.
authors
Brown, Lyn Mikel
other lists
Anger
Harvard University Press
University Presses
Women's Issues