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Shelter blues : sanity and selfhood among the homeless / Robert Desjarlais.
De Gruyter University of Pennsylvania Press eBook Package Archive 1898-1999 Available online
View online- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Desjarlais, Robert R.
- Series:
- Contemporary Ethnography
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Homeless persons--United States.
- Homeless persons.
- Homeless persons--Mental health--United States.
- Homeless persons--Services for--United States.
- Homelessness--Psychological aspects.
- Homelessness.
- United States--Social conditions.
- United States.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (321 p.)
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, c1997.
- Language Note:
- English
- Summary:
- Desjarlais shows us not anonymous faces of people experiencing homelessness but real people. While it is estimated that 25 percent or more of American's experiencing homelessness are mentally ill, their lives are largely unknown to us. What must life be like for those who, in addition to living on the street, hear voices, suffer paranoid delusions, or have trouble thinking clearly or talking to others. Shelter Blues is an innovative portrait of people residing in Boston's Station Street Shelter. It examines the everyday lives of more than 40 men and women experiencing homelessness, both white and African-American, ranging in age from early 20s to mid-60s. Based on a sixteen-month study, it draws readers into the personal worlds of these individuals and, by addressing the intimacies of homelessness, illness, and abjection, picks up where most scholarship and journalism stops. Robert Desjarlais works against the grain of media representations of homelessness by showing us not anonymous stereotypes but individuals. He draws on conversations as well as observations, talking with and listening to shelter residents to understand how they relate to their environment, to one another, and to those entrusted with their care. His book considers their lives in terms of a complex range of forces and helps us comprehend the linkages between culture, illness, personhood, and political agency on the margins of contemporary American society. Shelter Blues is unlike anything else ever written about homelessness. It challenges social scientists and mental health professionals to rethink their approaches to human subjectivity and helps us all to better understand one of the most pressing problems of our time.
- Contents:
- Front matter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- “Beauty and the Street”
- Alice Weldman’s Concerns
- Rethinking Experience
- Struggling Along
- A Critical Phenomenology
- Questions 01 Shelter
- Five Coefficients
- “A Crazy Place to Put Crazy People”
- The Sea of Tranquility
- “Too Much”
- Beautiful Ruins
- Framing the Homeless
- Sensory (Dis)Orientations
- The Walls
- Roots to Earth
- On the Basketball Court
- Smoking and Eating and Talking
- Displacement and Obscurity
- A Physics of Homelessness
- Hearing Voices
- Holding It Together
- Taking Meds
- The Street
- Secondness to Firstness
- Pacing My Mind
- The Give and Take
- Stand Away
- Ragtime
- “Who?-What’s Your Name?”
- “We’re Losing Him, Sam”
- Reasonable Reasonableness
- Tactics, Questions, Rhetoric
- Epistemologies of the Real
- Reactivity
- The Office of Reason
- Figure, Character, Person
- How to Do Things with Feeling
- Architectures of Sense
- Bodies with Organs
- With Your Head Tilted to the Side
- Pacing the Labyrinth
- Appendix: List of Shelter Residents
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Notes:
- Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
- Includes bibliographical references (p. [285]-301) and index.
- ISBN:
- 9781283897860
- 1283897865
- 9780812206432
- 0812206436
- OCLC:
- 794702283
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