Andrew Solomon writes about politics, culture, and health. He lives in New York and London. He has written for many publications--such as the New York Times, The New Yorker and Artforum--on topics including depression, Soviet artists, the cultural rebirth of Afghanistan, Libyan politics, and deaf culture. He is also a Contributing Writer for Travel and Leisure. In 2008, he was awarded the Humanitarian Award of the Society of Biological Psychiatry for his contributions to the field of mental health. He has a staff appointment as a Lecturer in Psychiatry at Cornell Medical School (Weill-Cornell Medical College).
From the National Book Award-winning author of the “brave…deeply humane…open-minded, critically informed, and poetic” ( The New York Times ) The Noonday Demon , comes a book about the consequences of extreme personal and cultural difference between parents and children. As a gay child of straight parents, Andrew Solomon was born with a condition that was considered an illness, but it became a cornerstone of his identity. While reporting on the explosion of Deaf pride in the 1990s, he began to consider illness and identity as a continuum with shifting boundaries. Spurred by the disability-rights movement and empowered by the Internet, communities with such “horizontal identities” are challenging expectations and norms. Their stories begin in families coping with extreme difference: dwarfism, Down syndrome, autism, multiple severe disabilities, or prodigious genius; children conceived in rape, or who identify as transgender; children who develop schizophrenia or commit serious crimes. The adage asserts that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, but in Solomon’s explorations, some apples fall on the other side of the world. For ten years, interviewing more than 250 families, Solomon has observed not just how some families learn to deal with exceptional children, but also how they find profound meaning in doing so. An utterly original thinker, Solomon mines the eloquence of ordinary people who have somehow summoned hope and courage in the face of heartbreaking prejudice and almost unimaginable difficulty. Far from the Tree is a masterpiece that will rattle our prejudices, question our policies, and inspire our understanding of the relationship between illness and identity. Above all, it will renew and deepen our gratitude for the herculean reach of parental love.
發表於2024-11-16
Far From the Tree 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
新闢的一條路,我愛它安靜,下班特地改變瞭路綫。馬路寬寬長長,人行道乾淨平展,一盞一盞路燈明亮光潔。在這寂寞的路上,遠遠的,有兩個紅色的身影。我看瞭一眼,隻一眼,就認齣瞭我十五年前的鄰居。 那是不可能認錯的。盡管媽媽變矮瞭,姑娘高過瞭她,當年五六歲的小姑娘變成...
評分新闢的一條路,我愛它安靜,下班特地改變瞭路綫。馬路寬寬長長,人行道乾淨平展,一盞一盞路燈明亮光潔。在這寂寞的路上,遠遠的,有兩個紅色的身影。我看瞭一眼,隻一眼,就認齣瞭我十五年前的鄰居。 那是不可能認錯的。盡管媽媽變矮瞭,姑娘高過瞭她,當年五六歲的小姑娘變成...
評分新闢的一條路,我愛它安靜,下班特地改變瞭路綫。馬路寬寬長長,人行道乾淨平展,一盞一盞路燈明亮光潔。在這寂寞的路上,遠遠的,有兩個紅色的身影。我看瞭一眼,隻一眼,就認齣瞭我十五年前的鄰居。 那是不可能認錯的。盡管媽媽變矮瞭,姑娘高過瞭她,當年五六歲的小姑娘變成...
評分新闢的一條路,我愛它安靜,下班特地改變瞭路綫。馬路寬寬長長,人行道乾淨平展,一盞一盞路燈明亮光潔。在這寂寞的路上,遠遠的,有兩個紅色的身影。我看瞭一眼,隻一眼,就認齣瞭我十五年前的鄰居。 那是不可能認錯的。盡管媽媽變矮瞭,姑娘高過瞭她,當年五六歲的小姑娘變成...
評分第一章像漫長的序,洋洋灑灑58頁但不知道想說什麼,沒有論點也沒有條理。其中44-58頁居然是名為注釋的bibliography!第一次見把這東西放文中的。 第二章聽障。個人故事堆砌得再多也隻是故事,沒有遞進沒有轉摺,眾生平等,全都一樣:耳蝸不好口語不好手語好,父母給幼兒安人工...
圖書標籤: 心理 Childcare 社會學 社會/文化 英文原版 社科 Sociology 身份認同
Far From the Tree 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載