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Des années 1930 à nos jours, l'écrivaine relate les mouvements de la vie des siens dans le sud des Etats-Unis : les naissances et les morts, les mariages, les déménagements, les célébrations religieuses et les souvenirs personnels. Faisant résonner les voix de sa propre famille, elle brosse un portrait intime de l'Amérique tout en restituant ses observations de la nature pour célébrer la vie.
Journalists --- Adult children of aging parents --- Renkl, Margaret --- Renkl, Margaret
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Father Flashes reimagines what the novel can be or do. Composed of stunning vignettes that capture the deterioration of a father's mind and body, this novel provides poetic insight into the complex workings of a father-daughter relationship. As the father collapses, what appears is the daughter's struggle to simply cope. In prose composed of intense and moving shards, Tricia Bauer delivers a revealing account of the gradual decomposition of all that is familiar and of a daughter's gathering of memories to form the arresting collage that is Father Flashes.
Alzheimer's disease --- Adult children of aging parents --- Photographers
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Aging parents --- Adult children of aging parents. --- Finance, Personal.
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Adult children of aging parents --- Aging parents --- Social conditions --- Care
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Throughout the twentieth-century, the United States implemented social policies targeting the needs of dependent parents - parents who were no longer able to work but lacked sufficient financial resources to support themselves. These parent dependency policies either encouraged or required family members, particularly adult children, to provide support as an alternative to government benefits. Debates over how best to support aging parents centered on conceptualizations of dependency and the moral obligations family owed their parents. Measures of dependency often inhibited aging Americans' access to benefits they needed, focusing instead on ensuring that they were, in fact, dependent and that other family resources were not available. Susan Stein-Roggenbuck highlights this understudied aspect of the modern US welfare state, highlighting the limited support provided to aging parents and the hardship they and their adult children endured in the efforts to minimize public expenditures.
Older people --- Economic conditions. --- Adult children of aging parents --- Dependency (Sociology) --- Social conditions.
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Aging parents --- Aging parents --- Adult children of aging parents --- Intergenerational relations
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Adult children of aging parents --- World War, 1914-1918 --- Motherless families --- Fathers and sons --- Boys
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Adult children of aging parents --- Aging parents --- Caregivers --- Daughters --- Family relationships --- Care
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Adult children of aging parents --- Aging parents --- Family relationships --- Family relationships
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Adult children of aging parents --- Aging parents --- Loss (Psychology) in old age --- Family relationships --- Care --- Psychology
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