The employment relationship between women illustrates how gender intersects with other factors (race, class, nationality, citizenship) to reveal deep meaning in the lifes and work of the women on both sides of the social divid -- E. Hu-DeHart * Choice *
Brown has done a masterful jobas a participant observerof reflecting the everyday world of female domestic laborers. While she, herself, straddles two worldsbelonging to an Afro Caribbean community that is victimized by racism while simultaneously having the financial resources to hire a part-time nanny to care for her two childrenher ethnic identity allowed her access to an insular community. The result is both fascinating and compelling. * www.ElevateDifference.com *
In Raising Brooklyn: Nannies, Childcare, asn Caribbeans Creating Community, Tamara Mose Brown gives a public voice to the concerns, hopes, and fears of West Indian child-care workers of Brooklyn, a tight-knit community of first-generation women who tend thousands of the city's children each day in its public parks. -- Catherine Bailey,Zocalo Public Square
In Raising Brooklyn, public spaces and social networks become the context for an engaging narrative. -- Rosanna Hertz * Women's Review of Books *
In Raising Brooklyn, Tamara Rose Brown presents a vibrant account of the robust social worlds created by West Indian babysitters...[she] has taken us inside a frequently seen but little-understood social world and has unpacked how it works to nurture its members. -- Cameron Macdonald * American Journal of Sociology *
A sensitive and nuanced glimpse into the lives of the women who raise so many of Brooklynsand Americas—children. Mose Brown has given us a deeply compelling and timely ethnography. -- Philip Kasinitz,co-author of Inheriting the City
Mose Brown has entered the hidden realm of West Indian childcare workers and produced a remarkable picture of urban life. This is fine grained, careful ethnography that reveals the taken for granted intimacies and politics of everyday experience. -- Mitchell Duneier,author of Sidewalk
Vividly writtenMose Browns own voice is especially poignant; her reflexivity about her relationships to others as a researcher, fellow New Yorker and mother is a model for contemporary ethnography. -- Joanna Dreby,author of Divided by Borders: Mexican Migrants and their Children
&8220;Outsiders can only wonder what West Indian caregivers say to each other as they sit on park benches watching their charges. Mose Brown gives us the answer, in an insightful and fascinating account of how these women create their own social worlds in public spaces. A revealing sociological portrait of women whose work and struggles command respect. -- Julia Wrigley,author of Education and Gender Equity
Despite economic and cultural marginalization, the West Indian child-care providers profiled in this ethnography carve out strong identities. Congregating in public spaces,such as parks, in majority-white, gentrified Brooklyn, the nannies assert themselves as integral members of their neighborhoods. * Ms. Magazine *
[An] engrossing look at the Caribbean community of child care workers in Brooklyn, N * Library Journal *
Part of a vibrant tradition of ethnographic studies of domestic work, Tamara Mose Browns Raising Brooklyn: Nannies, Childcare, and Caribbeans Creating Community provides a richly detailed description of the community networks of West Indian childcare providers in gentrifying Brooklyn. Drawing on three years of research, including both participant observation and in-depth interviews, Brown illuminates how these women navigate their employee-employer relations, as well as race, class, and gender categories as they move between private and public space. * The Teachers College Record *