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Missing Pieces Kenneth Zola

Missing Pieces By Kenneth Zola

Missing Pieces by Kenneth Zola


$21.65
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Focusing on the personal odyssey of a man with a disability, this book tries to tell as well as analyze what it is like to have a disability in a world that values vigor and health. It is suitable for the general reader, as well as for the rehabilitation counselor, social worker, or social scientist.

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Missing Pieces Summary

Missing Pieces: A Chronicle Of Living With A Disability by Kenneth Zola

The personal odyssey of a man with a disability, this passionate book tries to tell as well as analyze what it is like to have a disability in a world that values vigor and health. Zola writes, \\u0022Missing Pieces is an unraveling of a social problem in the manner of Black Like Me. Like its author, I, too, am a trained social observer, but for me 'passing' was not an issue. For I already have the stigmata of the disabled-the braces, the limp, the cane-though I have spent much of my life denying their existence.\\u0022 The author started out in the role of a social scientist on a seven-day excursion to acquaint himself with an extraordinary experiment in living-Het Dorp, one of the few places in the world designed to promote \\u0022the optimum happiness\\u0022 of those with severe physical disabilities. Neither a medial center nor a nursing home, Het Dorp is a village in the western-most part of the Netherlands. What began as a sociological attempt to describe this unusual setting became, through the author's growing awareness, what can only be called a socio-autobiography. Resuming his prior dependence on a wheelchair, the author experienced his own transformation from someone who is \\u0022normal\\u0022 and \\u0022valid\\u0022 to someone who is \\u0022invalid.\\u0022 The routine of Het Dorp became his: he lived in an architecturally modified home, visited the workshops, and shared meals, social events, conversation, and perceptions with the remarkably diverse residents. The author confronts some rarely discussed issues-the self-image of a person with a chronic disability, how one fills one's time, how one deals with authority and dependence, and love and sex. Missing Pieces offers striking insights into an aspect of the human condition shared by nearly 30 million Americans. It is must-read for the general reader, as well as for the rehabilitation counselor, social worker, or social scientist.

Missing Pieces Reviews

[An] important addition to the growing literature... Missing Pieces is a fascinating and readable 'socioautobiography' that I had difficulty putting down.-Paul J. Corcoran, The New England Journal of Medicine Full of insights about the experience of disability and chronic illness, it shows us a variety of social and cultural institutions through the eyes of those whom they exclude and deny. Such studies are all too rare in the sociology of health and illness. It tells not only Zola's own story but the story of handicapped people, disabled as much by society as by any fact of body and/or mind. It is a moving, powerful, and profoundly human examination not of them but of us all.-Joseph W. Schneider, Contemporary Sociology Important and moving. We see a man grow whole as he discovers and accepts his particular limits and his complex limitlessness.-Christina Robb, The Boston Globe An absorbing book that will sensitize and enlighten...Zola has paved the way in providing us with a rich, humane, and provocative account of disability in the modern world.-Sol Levine, Qualitative Sociology Crisp and candid... full of compassion.-David A. Buehler, Library Journal His account is delivered with humour, honesty, respect, and humility. It offers insights into the world of disability, but really tells the reader as much about the wider society and its difficulty to adjust the word to embrace the needs of disabled people.-Disability and Society ...a classic.-Review of Disability Studies Today's college kids take identity politics and area studies for granted, but they only exist because of people like Zola. His sociological look inside an assisted living facility, first published in 1981, was a foundational text for the study of disability. And its re-release couldn't be more timely: It comes as the idea of politics organized around identity is increasingly considered obscene. Zola's exploration of what it means to live as an embodiment of the body's frailty in a culture that fetishizes perfect health reminds us of identity politics' relevance.-City Limits

About Kenneth Zola

Irving Kenneth Zola (1935-1994) was Professor of Sociology at Brandeis University and a founding member and counselor at the Boston Self-Help Center. Nancy Mairs is the author of seven books, including Waist-High in the World: A Life Among the Disabled, and most recently, A Troubled Guest: Life and Death Stories. She lives in Tucson with her husband, George.

Table of Contents

ForewordAcknowledgmentsPart I. BeforePrologue: Overcoming Is Only the Start1. In the Beginning There Was an Idea2. Several Hours in a UtopiaPart II. During3. So Much in So Short a Time-Thursday, May 254. The Little Things that Fill a Day-Friday, May 265. The Greatest Night of the Year-Saturday, May 276. Confrontations and Conversations with Myself-Sunday, May 287. On the Problem of Sharing Power and Love-Monday, May 298. It All Depends on Whether You Stand or Sit-Tuesday, May 309. Gone but Not Forgotten-Wednesday, May 31Part III. After10. If Listening is Hard, Telling Is Worse: Thoughts on the improbable and Problematic World of the Physically Handicapped and Chronically Ill11. Four Steps on the Road to Invalidity: The Denial of Sexuality, Anger, Vulnerability, and PotentialityEpilogue: Some Concluding but Hardly Final Thoughts on Integration, Personal and Social

Additional information

CIN1592132448VG
9781592132447
1592132448
Missing Pieces: A Chronicle Of Living With A Disability by Kenneth Zola
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Temple University Press,U.S.
20030902
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Missing Pieces