Down Country Lanes, Behind Abandoned Houses

Down Country Lanes, Behind Abandoned Houses
Author: Keith V. Bletzer
Publisher: Bentham Science Publishers
Total Pages: 613
Release: 2015-07-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1681081040

Based on six years of extended ethnography in multiple agricultural areas of the Eastern United States, Down Country Lanes, Behind Abandoned Houses is a monograph which explores the lives of migrant and seasonal farm workers. The six-year study secured multi-setting field data in primary, secondary and casual sites, and audio-taped narrative life stories from men and women who harvest and perform the related tasks that help to make the many foods which we enjoy in abundance. The study presented in this book elaborates vignettes from field observations with a focus on workers who use drugs and alcohol, and is complemented by formal (narrative life stories) and informal interviews. The author explores diverse field data that reveal the hardships, exclusion and social adversities that migrant farm workers experience many times more often than any other social group with considerable susceptibility to drug / alcohol use. Down Country Lanes, Behind Abandoned Houses gives readers a perspective about farm workers’ social vulnerability across multiple agricultural areas, while comparing willful neglect and social non-existence experienced by farm workers to a gray zone of contemporary horrors in the way that these men and women have been viewed and treated over many decades. The monograph is an invaluable reference for the study of social problems, substance abuse, trans-national migratory experiences and field methods in sociology. The book also serves as a contemporary handbook on the anthropology of American agricultural labor.

Practicing Applied Anthropology Across Discontinuous Social Fields

Practicing Applied Anthropology Across Discontinuous Social Fields
Author: Keith V. Bletzer
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2023-07-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1527517616

This book covers the author’s field experiences as an ethnographer in one country of Central America and an applied anthropologist in four US regions. A range of social fields are examined, which include: constructing a work experience table as a composite job resumé; correspondence with a maximum security prisoner for more than ten years; design features for multiple choice testing; farmworker sero-prevalence reports; health-seeking behavior among the Ngöbé (indigenous people in Central America); HIV/AIDS education in rural farm labor camps; Latinx naming practices for grocery stores and restaurants in agricultural areas; organizational capacity building assistance training; and teaching students in a community college and three secondary schools, among others. The book highlights the importance of incorporating ethnography in the completion of work tasks across a range of social fields, which represent diverse socio-cultural groups and immigrant populations.

The Autobiography of Earnest Sims

The Autobiography of Earnest Sims
Author: Earnest "Tex" Sims Sr
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 890
Release: 2012-06
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1468538764

The autobiography of Earnest Sims is about the childhood of Earnest Sims, an African-American rising from the cotton picking era to write.

Daily Dose of Dogs (Aka Cats with Your Coffee)

Daily Dose of Dogs (Aka Cats with Your Coffee)
Author: Chrystal Parker
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 586
Release: 2012-03-28
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1469188554

This is, first and foremost, a book about private animal rescue. The stories are true. As a result, these pages are filled with sadness and joy, loss and hope, heartbreak and compassion. Within the stories, personalities emerge, and the love affair between author and animal is apparent. During the course of one year, the author blogs the stories from her past alongside the rescues that occur in real time. Along the way, she discovers a growing support system in the blogosphere. Those connections offer not only emotional succor but also very tangible aid. The world of private animal rescue is candidly revealed in a series of short vignettes.

UVF

UVF
Author: Aaron Edwards
Publisher: Merrion Press
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2017-12-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1785371061

UVF: Behind the Mask is the gripping new history of the Ulster Volunteer Force from its post-1965 incarnation to the present day. Aaron Edwards blends rigorous research with unprecedented access to leading members of the UVF to unearth the startling inner-workings of one of the world’s oldest and most ruthless paramilitary groups. Through interviews with high-profile UVF leaders, such as Billy Mitchell, David Ervine, Billy Wright, Billy Hutchinson and Gary Haggarty, as well as their loyalist rivals including Johnny Adair, Edwards reveals the grisly details behind their sadistic torture and murder techniques and their litany of high-profile atrocities: McGurk’s Bar, the Dublin and Monaghan bombings, the Miami Showband massacre and the Shankill Butchers’ serial-killing spree, amongst others. Edwards’ life and career has led him to the centre of the UVF’s long, dark underbelly; in this defining work he offers a comprehensive and authoritative study of an armed group that continues to play a pivotal role in Northern Irish society.

Nobody's Home

Nobody's Home
Author: Scott Kennedy
Publisher: FriesenPress
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2024-03-15
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1039193250

The scourge of the monster house affects communities all across Canada, so while the Toronto neighbourhood of York Mills is not unique in this respect, it has suffered more than most, owing to the generous size of its residential lots in what has now become the centre of the city. York Mills was still a rural community until after the Second World War, when a post-war population boom created a housing boom that gobbled up the local woods and farmland. By 1960 most of this land had been sacrificed for housing, and by the mid-1970s it was all gone. Then a strange thing began to happen. Developers, who had the money to outbid legitimate home buyers, started tearing down perfectly liveable post-war homes to build monster houses. Today, over fifty years later, this destructive practice continues. The environmental costs have been devastating, as affordable houses are demolished—their remains dumped in landfills—and mature trees are cut down to facilitate the new construction: construction that demands copious amounts of wood, cement, and other new building materials. The social cost has been equally damaging, as affordable homes are destroyed and replaced by multi-million-dollar houses that are out of reach of families who once called these neighbourhoods home. The three hundred colour photos in this book recall but a fraction of the homes we have lost in this one community alone. The text tells their stories, stories that take us back to a time when houses were places to live, not get-rich-quick schemes.

The End

The End
Author: Craig Hole
Publisher: Craig Hole
Total Pages: 468
Release:
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1310067589

Peter is slowly dying, across multiple realities, in multiple universes, he is facing the end. In intertwining tales we follow Peter as he faces his own death. From getting caught up in a resistance movement against an alien invasion, to a world where he is a killer fighting his addiction

Killing Time

Killing Time
Author: Michael Mahn
Publisher: Archway Publishing
Total Pages: 374
Release: 2017-06-23
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1480848093

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, anarchy and chaos rule. Dozens of foul-play situations are reported as corpses are discovered in empty houses and buildings. Scores are being settled. A former assistant district attorney, Henry Xavier OGrady, known to his friends as Irish Henry, is in the midst of it. Henry encounters Martin the Kid Montague, a writer and a witness to the JFK assassination. The Kid has feared for his life since that event. Henry and the Kid each have their own enemies, a direct result of how well they do their jobs. Some of these enemies are the same, namely the local mob, but others are jealous co-workers. The pairs troubled histories catch up with them in the Big Easy and lead to a denouement that offers insight to the tragic event in Dallas. With touches of international intrigue and romance, this mystery novel offers an alternative theory to the lingering question of the JFK assassination.

Two Children Behind A Wall

Two Children Behind A Wall
Author: Catherine Laylle
Publisher: Random House
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2011-12-31
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1448108187

In 1984, Catherine Laylle, a Frenchwomen living in London, met and married a German medical student, Dieter. The couple had two sons, Alexander and Constantin. When, however, at Dieter's insistence, they moved back to his home town in Germany, the marriage began to fall apart. Dieter refused to get a job, Catherine found living with his family oppressive and eventually, she returned to London with the children. The boys spent term time with their mother, holidays with their father - until the summer of 1994, when Dieter decided that his sons should be raised as Germans and, with the support of the local judge, defied the London court ruling that gave Catherine custody. Catherine went to the courts in London, Germany and the Hague - but it seemed that no court outside the jurisdiction of Lower Saxony would overrule the decision. Today, Alexander is eleven and Constantin is nine. Catherine has barely seen them in the two years since Dieter kidnapped them - and then only under the supervision of one of his friends. This is the harrowing story of a mother's attempts to regain her children, and of her desperate struggle against a tyrannical family and the blind injustice of the courts in Europe.