Amazon.com Review
With measures to tackle the social issues caused by teen pregnancy being bantered about the halls of Congress like a beach volleyball, it's refreshing to receive some serious, measured thinking on the context and causes of teenage pregnancy. Kristin Luker, a professor of sociology and law at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of
Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood, presents a book that tracks the history of our near-obsession with the subject. Her central point is that pregnancy is a measuring stick of poverty, not a cause. While there's statistical analysis aplenty, the work comes to life through the words of the young mothers she interviewed.
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From Publishers Weekly
A fresh perspective but a patchy read, Luker's latest charts the history of society's obsession with pregnant teens and the social ills they have come to represent. The author of Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood, Luker is a professor of sociology and law at UC-Berkeley. Her central theme?teenage motherhood should be considered "a measure, not a cause of poverty and social ills"?will be embraced by liberals, but both sides of the debate over teen pregnancy will benefit from the author's analysis of society's prejudice. Luker points out that although older women and white women became the largest group of unwed mothers in the 1970s and '80s, it is "the teenage mother?in particular the black teenage mother?[who] came to personify the social, economic, and sexual trends that... affected almost everyone in America." Although full of dismantled misconceptions and startling statistics, Dubious Conceptions is marred by such unilluminating observations as, "A marriage license is no guarantee that...a father will continue to support his children financially or even come to visit them." Later in the work, Luker interjects the voices of young mothers. Their naivete is heartbreaking?"It's even harder than they say it is. I knew it would be hard, but not this hard," says one?and they are the ones who best underscore the importance of Luker's work. Teenage mothers are not a disease but young people whose problems, along with society's, require a real understanding of the issues.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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