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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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«Il serait temps que je meure, sinon je vais vous fatiguer. C'est toi qui te fatigues : tu ne t'ennuies pas, toute la journée à ne rien faire ? Je ne m'ennuie jamais. Quand je n'aurai plus rien à faire, je deviendrai enfin bonne. » Une nuit, la narratrice rêve que sa mère, handicapée et malvoyante, parcourt à pied dans l'obscurité les cent kilomètres qui les séparent. Ce rêve inaugure un temps durant lequel, dans la « grande et brave maison » où la mère voudrait mourir parmi les siens, se renoue un lien ambivalent mais tenace. Cinq ans plus tard, la presque centenaire assumera avec courage la nécessité de son placement dans un établissement de soins. Cet exil se doublera du confinement imposé par la pandémie, la voix de la mère au téléphone constituant l'unique vecteur de sa révolte. La mort l'emportera sans qu'elle ait pu revoir ses enfants. Mais ce qu'elle a voulu faire de sa fin offrira une lumineuse consolation au désarroi familial.
Personnes âgées handicapées. --- Maisons de retraite. --- Authors, Belgian --- Women authors, Belgian --- Adult children of aging parents --- Mothers and daughters --- Lamarche, Caroline --- Family. --- Daughters and mothers --- Daughters --- Girls --- Mother and child --- Aging parents' adult children --- Children of aging parents --- Aging parents --- Sandwich generation --- Belgian women authors --- Belgian authors --- French literature (outside France)
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Women more often than men take care of their ageing relatives together with their own children or grandchildren. These Sandwich Generation (SG) women constitute an expanding vulnerable group on the labour market at higher risk of discrimination, work-family conflict, burnout, and withdrawal from the labour market and unemployment. Working Women in the Sandwich Generation helps present a clearer view of how to support this group both now and in the future. Beginning with a presentation of quantitative and qualitative research that sheds light on the SG situation in Poland, Finland and Flanders, this volume provides insights into various components from the SG life domains such as personal development and learning, connection to the labour market, coping strategies, resources, and energy drainers. In the second part the book provides tools for SG women, their supervisors, educators, and coaches to help manage challenging situations and improving wellbeing at work. Working Women in the Sandwich Generation then introduces the results of international comparative research the purpose of which was to identify and characterise the SG in five European countries before concluding with recommendations for supervisors and policy makers in supporting SG women.
Management: leadership & motivation --- Gender studies: women --- Sociology: work & labour --- Mature women --- Labour market --- Research and methodology --- Lifelong learning --- Work-family interference --- Time4Help Project --- Aging parents --- Sandwich generation --- Women --- Work and family --- Working mothers
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