Description
About the Author
Jeremy Seabrook is the author of more than forty books on subjects as diverse as transnational prostitution, child labour, social class, ageing, unemployment and poverty. His most recent include Pauperland: Poverty and the Poor in Britain and The Song of the Shirt: The High Price of Cheap Garments, from Blackburn to Bangladesh, which won the Bread and Roses Prize for Radical Publishing in 2016.
Reviews
'A stinging history of abandonment.'
'Full of heartrending examples of suffering.'
'Illuminating. . . Seabrook is a veteran writer of the left, and his work always reflects a profound commitment to social justice.'
'Seabrook gives us the voices, old and new, of those who have suffered from neglect and worse at the hand of the state and charitable organisations.'
'A compelling, comprehensively researched, world-wide history of orphans, past and present. The many first-hand accounts are harrowing, and Seabrook's clear compassionate prose lets the bleak facts speak for themselves.'
'Impassioned and assertive, Seabrook's book draws extensively on first-hand accounts from those who have been orphaned by church, state, voluntary organisations and the market as much as by death of parents. Rooted in British history, but global in its range of evidence, it scotches belief in a narrative of progress.' -- Hugh Cunningham, Emeritus Professor of Social History, University of Kent, and author of 'The Invention of Childhood'
Book Information
ISBN 9781849049429
Author Jeremy Seabrook
Format Hardback
Page Count 320
Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd