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Contribution to Book
The Home as "Field": Households and Homework in Rural Appalachia
Thresholds in Feminist Research: Difference, Methodology, and Representation (1997)
  • Ann M. Oberhauser, West Virginia University
Abstract
Locating Lydia's house in rural McDowell Country had been a challenge. We finally stopped at a small post office to ask directions and were directed to a house across a nearby stream. As we reached our destination, a dozen chickens, two goats, and several puppies greeted us in the front yard. Lydia stepped onto the side porch and invited us inside. "Be careful on the stairs," she warned, "my husband still hasn't fixed them rotten boards." Upon entering a small kitchen, Lydia showed us some pictures of the children in her home-based day care. In the living room, a coal-burning stove was sending off welcome heat on the that cold November morning (figure 9.1).
Publication Date
1997
Editor
J.P. Jones III, H. J. Nast, and S. M. Roberts (eds.)
Publisher
Rowman and Littlefield
Publisher Statement
1997. Rowman and Littlefield. Posted with permission.
Citation Information
Ann M. Oberhauser. "The Home as "Field": Households and Homework in Rural Appalachia" New YorkThresholds in Feminist Research: Difference, Methodology, and Representation (1997) p. 165 - 183
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ann-oberhauser/14/