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A Tradition That Has No Name: Nurturing the Development of People, Families, and Communities / Edition 1
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A Tradition That Has No Name: Nurturing the Development of People, Families, and Communities / Edition 1
Current price: $24.99
Barnes and Noble
A Tradition That Has No Name: Nurturing the Development of People, Families, and Communities / Edition 1
Current price: $24.99
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Mary Field Belenky, Lynne A. Bond, and Jacqueline S. Weinstock, hoping to carry Belenky's theoretical work in the bestselling
Women's Ways of Knowing
into the realm of everyday life, created the Listening Partners project, designed to help young women isolated in rural poverty give voice to their personal and communal needs and come together to create social change
. A Tradition That Has No Name
explores this project and the work of other women who have created organizations to give voice to and strengthen traditions of community organizing and leadership, particularly as they have developed in communities of women marginalized by race and class. Ranging across cultures and classesfrom struggling inner-city neighborhoods to affluent middle-class suburbs, from African American communities in the South to poor rural communities in Vermontthe book teaches us how to appreciate the ways women create networks of listening and community-building, and how to bring these little-recognized traditions of women's activism to the forefront of public life. It is these public homeplaces” women create together, the authors argue, that hold the key for empowering communities and creating social change.
Women's Ways of Knowing
into the realm of everyday life, created the Listening Partners project, designed to help young women isolated in rural poverty give voice to their personal and communal needs and come together to create social change
. A Tradition That Has No Name
explores this project and the work of other women who have created organizations to give voice to and strengthen traditions of community organizing and leadership, particularly as they have developed in communities of women marginalized by race and class. Ranging across cultures and classesfrom struggling inner-city neighborhoods to affluent middle-class suburbs, from African American communities in the South to poor rural communities in Vermontthe book teaches us how to appreciate the ways women create networks of listening and community-building, and how to bring these little-recognized traditions of women's activism to the forefront of public life. It is these public homeplaces” women create together, the authors argue, that hold the key for empowering communities and creating social change.