The Maternal is Political
Women Writers at the Intersection of Motherhood and Social Change
ISBN-10: 1580052436
ISBN-13: 9781580052434
280 pages
Paperback
$15.95 US
Published: June 2008
About the Book
Exploring the vital connection between motherhood and social change, The Maternal Is Political features forty-four powerful, hard-hitting literary essays by women who are striving to make the world a better place for children and families—both their own and other women's—in this country and globally.
Each contributor tackles complex issues facing mothers and society today. Whether it's a mother teaching her children to live ecologically responsible lives, a mother struggling to get out of poverty while raising her kids, a mother's response to her child being sent to Iraq, or a mother voting for the first time, each writer forges the link, the crucial relationship, between the personal (life with family) and the political (life in the world) to give voice to, and thus empower, other women to realize and seize their collective political clout as mothers. Written by and for mothers, The Maternal Is Political is crafted to help motivate us to discover, appreciate, and use with greater effectiveness our tremendously powerful (and too often underutilized) political votes and voices to create positive social change.
About Shari MacDonald Strong
Shari MacDonald Strong is a freelance writer who lives in Portland, Oregon. Her essay “On Wanting a Girl” appeared in the Seal Press anthology It’s a Girl: Women Writers on Raising Daughters (edited by Andrea J. Buchanan). She writes the “Zen and the Art of Child Maintenance” column about motherhood and spirituality for Literary Mama (www.literarymama.com), serves as editor of the creative nonfiction department at Literary Mama, writes an ongoing column for Mamazine (www.mamazine.com), and is the organizer for Mother Talk™ events (www.mothertalk.org) in Portland, Oregon. Shari worked as an editor and copywriter in the publishing industry for fifteen years (most recently as a freelance contractor for a division of Random House), and her writing has appeared in a number of publications including Geez magazine (www.geezmagazine.org). She recently has appeared as a guest blogger at Leslie Morgan Steiner’s “On Balance” blog at www.WashingtonPost.com as well as at Austin Mama.
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