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Foster Care Odyssey
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Foster Care Odyssey Hardback -

by Theresa Cameron

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  • Hardcover

Description

University Press of Mississippi , pp. xii + 255 . Hardback. New.
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Details

  • Title Foster Care Odyssey
  • Author Theresa Cameron
  • Binding Hardback
  • Edition First Edition
  • Condition New
  • Pages 381
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher University Press of Mississippi , Jackson, Mississippi, U.S.A.
  • Date pp. xii + 255
  • Features Dust Cover, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 61204205
  • ISBN 9781578064205 / 1578064201
  • Weight 1.25 lbs (0.57 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.22 x 6.4 x 1.01 in (23.42 x 16.26 x 2.57 cm)
  • Themes
    • Cultural Region: Mid-Atlantic
    • Ethnic Orientation: African American
    • Geographic Orientation: New York
    • Topical: Family
  • Library of Congress subjects Foster children - New York (State), African American women - New York (State)
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2001046667
  • Dewey Decimal Code B

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From the publisher

Without signing the documents that would permit adoption, young Theresa Cameron's mother placed her little daughter under the aegis of Catholic Charities, and then the mother vanished forever.

During the 1960s and 1970s this abandoned, unadoptable child was shuttled through foster homes in the vicinity of Buffalo, N.Y. Insecure, desolate, and frightened, she was rotated through group homes and the houses of alien families, the victim of religious hypocrisy, racial prejudice, and insult.

Theresa remained in this bleak, shame-imposing limbo until she was eighteen. Foster Care Odyssey is her candid story.

"What little I owned," she writes, "could have fit inside my usual moving-day luggage--a couple of shopping bags. Besides my clothing, I only had a few school supplies. Like the other girls at the group home, I attached very little sentimental value to the items I owned. The only thing of value that could not be taken away from me were my thoughts."

Theresa places her narrative against the backdrop of the civil rights movement in blue-collar Buffalo, where mixed-race foster homes were almost unknown and where she witnessed a welfare system that accorded only marginal benevolence to children, particularly black children caught in the squeeze of bureaucratic machinery.

As she passed through her turbulent teenage years, she acquired both a strong will and a tough veneer to shield herself from the many hurts in a restrictive world infused with racism and institutional segregation.

Her coming-of-age narrative voices plainspoken criticism of the pernicious system which engulfed her and other helpless abandoned children.

First line

My birth certificate says I was born on January 29, 1954, in Buffalo, a medium-sized industrialized city on the shores of Lake Erie in western New York.

Media reviews

Citations

  • Publishers Weekly, 04/08/2002, Page 0
  • PW Notes and Reprints, 04/08/2002, Page 224

About the author

Theresa Cameron is associate professor of planning in the College of Architecture and Environmental Design at Arizona State University. She has been published in the Journal of Health and Social Policy, Policy Studies Journal, and Landscape and Urban Planning.