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Daughters and Granddaughters of Farmworkers: Emerging from the Long Shadow of Farm Labor
Penulis
: Barbara Wells
Edisi
:
Editor
:
Collation
:
Subyek
: Mexican American women agricultural laborers—California, Mexican American women—Social conditions—California, Mexican American women—Social life and customs
Penerbit
: Rutgers University Press
Tahun
: 2013
ISBN
:
Call Number
: ebook 387
Ringkasan :
As an Anglo graduate student in sociology, I was honored and privileged to work with a leading Latina family sociologist, Maxine Baca Zinn. I learned from her that to be a successful scholar, one must ask the right questions and be committed to the virtue of hard work. In working with Maxine, I became convinced of the explanatory power of a structural analysis that takes into account the intersection of race, social class, and gender. The honor continued as we collaborated on what is by now a well-known analysis of Latino families, “Diversity within Latino Families: New Lessons for Family Social Science” (2000). Beyond specific Latina/o concerns, I have been privileged to work with Maxine and D. Stanley Eitzen on a diversity-based approach to family sociology in the textbook, Diversity in Families. It is the convergence of these two themes in my intellectual development—seeing the analytical promise of structural analysis and developing an interest in Latino families—that brought me to the present project. My decision to undertake this research project was further encouraged by what I perceived to be a challenge put forward by authors of an article in a leading journal in the field of family studies, the Journal of Marriage and Family. In a review of the research on ethnic families from the 1990s, “Marital Processes and Parental Socialization in Families of Color: A Decade Review of Research” (2000), McLoyd and her coauthors concluded that if one had to deduce the current demographic realities of the United States from the quantity of research on Latino families, one would conclude that these families were a “miniscule” percentage of the population. The authors called for more and better research on Latino families. The circumstances have changed in ensuing years as more research has centered on Latino families. Much of the new research is excellent, but it has been clear that more qualitative research is needed. This book is the product of a process of thinking carefully about how I might contribute to the body of research on this important segment of the U.S. population.

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