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Monday, December 6, 2010

Book Review - Papa PhD

About the Book
It is not easy raising a family and balancing work and personal commitments in academia, regardless of gender. Parents endure the stress of making tenure with the demands of life with children. While women’s careers are derailed more often than men’s as a result of such competing pressures, fathers, too, experience conflicting feelings about work and home, making parenting ever more challenging. In Papa, PhD: Essays on Fatherhood by Men in the Academy (Paper $21.95, 978-0-8135-4879-1, December 2010), Mary Ruth Marotte, Paige Martin Reynolds, and Ralph James Savarese bring together a group of contributors from a variety of backgrounds and disciplines to discuss fatherhood in academia.

Papa, PhDs are white, black, South Asian, Asian, and Arab. They are gay and straight, married and divorced. They are tenured and untenured, at research-one universities and at community colleges. Some write at the beginning of their careers, others at the end.  But, perhaps most important they do not look back—they look forward to new parental and professional synergies as they reflect on what it means to be a father in the academy.

The fathers writing in Papa, PhD seek to expand their children’s horizons, giving them the gifts of better topic sentences and a cosmopolitan sensibility. They seriously consider the implications of gender theory and queer theory—even Marxist theory—and make relevant theoretical connections between their work and the less abstract, more pragmatic, world of fathering. What resonates is the astonishing range of forms that fatherhood can take as these dads challenge traditional norms by actively questioning the status quo.

About the editors
MARY RUTH MAROTTE is an assistant professor of English and the director of graduate studies in English at the University of Central Arkansas. She is the author of Captive Bodies: American Women Writers Redefine Pregnancy and Childbirth.

PAIGE MARTIN REYNOLDS is an assistant professor of English at the University of Central Arkansas, where she specializes in teaching and writing about early modern drama.

RALPH JAMES SAVARESE teaches American literature, disability studies, and creative writing at Grinnell College. He is the author of Reasonable People: A Memoir of Autism and Adoption, which Newsweek called a “real-life love story and a passionate manifesto for the rights of people with neurological disabilities,” and the winner of the Herman Melville Society’s Hennig Cohen Prize for an “Outstanding Contribution to Melville Scholarship.” 

Also available
Mama, PhD: Women Write about Motherhood and Academic Life
Edited by Elrena Evans and Caroline Grant

My Take on the BookAs a person that works in Academia, this book was an interesting take on thoughts of fatherhood. I have read many different books written by fathers in the past, but many took humorous looks at fatherhood. This book, was completely raw and drew me in from page one. I liked that the book was broken down into different essays and allowed me to examine different father's thoughts. 

This book though is quite deep and it will make you think. I think that for this alone, this book stands out as something different and something that will stand the test of time. 

If you are looking for a refreshing look at fatherhood, this book delivers and you will not be disappointed.

All opinions expressed in this review are my own and not influenced in any way by the company.  Any product claim, statistic, quote or other representation about a product or service should be verified with the manufacturer or provider. Please refer to this site's Disclaimer  for more information. I have been compensated or given a product free of charge, but that does not impact my views or opinions. 
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