|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Juniper Fitzgerald , Elise PetersonPublisher: Feminist Press at The City University of New York Imprint: Feminist Press at The City University of New York ISBN: 9781936932009ISBN 10: 1936932008 Pages: 36 Publication Date: 29 March 2018 Recommended Age: From 2 to 6 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Board book Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsFitzgerald writes simply, but in combination with Peterson's images, her words carry force. . . . It's a political statement, but one that flows from passion and love. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) Amazingly inclusive. --Kirkus Reviews Shatters monolithic depictions of motherhood. . . . By depicting love and security beyond a White, professionalized class, the book allows children of different backgrounds to see their family lives reflected authentically. --Colorlines A staple for any parent who wants to redefine gender roles, and raise their child in a more inclusive, sex-positive world where all work is valued. --Bust Wonderful. --MSN Lifestyle Beautifully illustrated. . . .the book provides an expanded picture of working moms and challenges head on the idea that only certain jobs are analogous with positive parenting. --Feministing This is a book that takes more than one stigma about women and work and chucks them right out the window. --Julie Danielson, Kirkus Beautiful. -- Sex Gets Real Podcast Inspired and inspiring. --Midwest Book Review Beautifully written and illustrated, How Mamas Love Their Babies provides a useful tool for parents who do stigmatized work to talk with their children about it in affirming and healthy ways. --Crystal DeBoise, LCSW All children should see their mamas reflected in their storybooks. This is a gift to not only sex workers and their families but to all who may need a better understanding of how stripping/sex work is labor, deserving of respect and dignity. --Juliana Piccillo, editor, Red Umbrella Babies This is the mothering book I've always dreamed of! How Mamas Love Their Babies shifts our narrow definition of what a mother is, what a mother does, what a mother looks like, and what caring for our babies looks like. --Sarah Sophie Flicker, activist Fitzgerald writes simply, but in combination with Peterson's images, her words carry force...It's a political statement, but one that flows from passion and love. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) Beautifully illustrated by Elise Peterson...the book provides an expanded picture of working moms and challenges head on the idea that only certain jobs are analogous with positive parenting. --The Feministing Five Beautifully written and illustrated, How Mamas Love provides a useful tool for parents who do stigmatized work to talk with their children about it in affirming and healthy ways. --Crystal DeBoise, LCSW All children should see their mamas reflected in their storybooks. This is a gift to not only sex workers and their families but to all who may need a better understanding of how stripping/sex work is labor, deserving of respect and dignity. --Juliana Piccillo, editor, Red Umbrella Babies This is the mothering book I've always dreamed of! How Mamas Love shifts our narrow definition of what a mother is, what a mother does, what a mother looks like, and what caring for our babies looks like. --Sarah Sophie Flicker, activist Fitzgerald writes simply, but in combination with Peterson's images, her words carry force...It's a political statement, but one that flows from passion and love. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) Amazingly inclusive. --Kirkus Reviews Shatters monolithic depictions of motherhood. . . . By depicting love and security beyond a White, professionalized class, the book allows children of different backgrounds to see their family lives reflected authentically. --Colorlines A staple for any parent who wants to redefine gender roles, and raise their child in a more inclusive, sex-positive world where all work is valued. --Bust Beautifully illustrated by Elise Peterson...the book provides an expanded picture of working moms and challenges head on the idea that only certain jobs are analogous with positive parenting. --Feministing Beautifully written and illustrated, How Mamas Love Their Babies provides a useful tool for parents who do stigmatized work to talk with their children about it in affirming and healthy ways. --Crystal DeBoise, LCSW All children should see their mamas reflected in their storybooks. This is a gift to not only sex workers and their families but to all who may need a better understanding of how stripping/sex work is labor, deserving of respect and dignity. --Juliana Piccillo, editor, Red Umbrella Babies This is the mothering book I've always dreamed of! How Mamas Love shifts our narrow definition of what a mother is, what a mother does, what a mother looks like, and what caring for our babies looks like. --Sarah Sophie Flicker, activist Author InformationJuniper Fitzgerald is a mother, former sex worker, and PhD based in Omaha, NE. Her academic work focuses on sex work, sex workers' rights, and alternative methodologies informed by feminist theories and the queering of intellectual spaces. For more than a decade, Juniper worked as a sex worker in various contexts and she continues to work as sex workers' rights advocate. She has contributed to several sex workers' rights cultural productions, including: The Red Umbrella Diaries, a spoken word event for sex workers created by Audacia Ray; The Red Umbrella Babies, a collection of writings by parents in the sex industry (forthcoming); SWOP, the Sex Worker Outreach Project; and CHANGE, the Center for Health and Gender Equity, a non-profit that supported Juniper in her petition for congress to eradicate the Anti-Prostitution Loyalty Oath. Elise Peterson is a writer, visual artist, former music editor for Solange Knowles's music-and-retail site Saint Heron, and a longtime arts educator living and working in New York. Her writing has appeared in Adult, Paper Magazine, Elle, Lenny Letter, and Nerve among others. She has been profiled by The Cut, Nylon, The Fader, and others. She is passionate about storytelling and investigating the nuance of identity and sexuality as it relates to marginalized communities. Comparably, her multi-disciplinary visual work focuses on reinterpreting the past in order to explore evolving notions on the intersection of technology, blackness and cross-generational narratives. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |