Maid: Hard Work, Low Pay, and a Mother’s Will to Survive
- Genre: Nonfiction; memoir; social commentary
- Originally Published: 2019
- Reading Level/Interest: College/Adult
- Structure/Length: 3 parts; 27 chapters; approximate 270 pages; approximately 8 hours, 34 minutes on audio
- Central Concern: In Maid, Stephanie Land offers an intimate and unflinching account of her years as a house cleaner in the Pacific Northwest. Navigating the complexities of poverty, houselessness, and bureaucracy, she paints a vivid portrait of the working poor in America. The narrative also delves into the challenges faced by single mothers in a system that often seems designed to keep them from succeeding.
- Potential Sensitivity Issues: Discussions of poverty, intimate partner abuse/domestic violence, houselessness, and societal inequalities; sexual content (references to pornography); profanity
CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Guide:
- The Psychological Costs of Poverty
- The Linked Traumas of Poverty and Abuse
- The Search for Home
- Motherhood in Poverty
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Teaching Guide, students will: