Ad
related to: books on abused women
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Courage to Heal: A Guide for Women Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse (first published in 1988, with three subsequent editions, the last being a 20th anniversary edition in 2008) is a self-help book by poet Ellen Bass and Laura Davis that focuses on recovery from child sexual abuse and has been called "controversial and polarizing".
I Never Told Anyone: Writings by Women Survivors of Child Sex Abuse is a 1983 book edited by Ellen Bass and Louise Thornton and marked Bass's first published non-fiction work. [1] It was published by Harper and Row and contains a collection of numerous child sexual abuse testimonials from a wide range of original source material including book ...
She is known for her work in domestic violence and the psychology of women, particularly her groundbreaking research on battered women. [1] [2] Walker is Professor Emeritus at Nova Southeastern University. [3] Walker gained prominence after publishing the book The Battered Woman in 1979. She also founded the Domestic Violence Institute after ...
Hedda Nussbaum (born August 8, 1942) is an American woman who was a caregiver of a six-year-old girl who died of physical abuse in 1987. The death of the girl, Lisa Steinberg, sparked a controversial trial and media frenzy. The legal case was one of the first to be televised "gavel to gavel."
In her study Comparative Study of Battered Women And Violence-Prone Women, [30] (co-researched with John Gayford of Warlingham Hospital), Pizzey distinguished between "genuine battered women" [30] and "violence-prone women"; [30] the former defined as "the unwilling and innocent victim of his or her partner's violence" [30] and the latter ...
Violence, in the right context, was considered funny to young readers, while explicit references to sex were perceived as superfluous to the story, providing neither moral guidance nor entertainment. And, loyal as they claimed to be to their purpose of accurately recording the tales, the Grimms had books to sell.
Dorothy Earlene Allison (April 11, 1949 – November 6, 2024) was an American writer whose writing focused on class struggle, sexual abuse, child abuse, feminism, and lesbianism. [1]
According to her own account, Chase was born on a homestead near Honeoye Falls, New York, and grew up in an apartment in the same town. [1] In her autobiography and in numerous interviews, Chase said that she was repeatedly and violently sexually and physically abused by her stepfather and beaten and neglected by her mother during her childhood and teenage years. [2]