The Disinherited Family


Book Description




The Disinherited Family


Book Description




The Disinherited


Book Description

Traces the 1914 suicide of Henry Sackville-West in the aftermath of his wife's cancer-related death and his failed efforts to be recognized as a legitimate heir, exploring how the lives of his legitimate and illegitimate siblings reflect the secret world of a British dynasty.




The Disinherited Family


Book Description




The Disinherited Family


Book Description

In 1919, with the vote won, the women's movement debated 'What next?' For Eleanor Rathbone and the 'New Feminists', the most fundamental goal of the women's movement was financial independence for women of every class, beginning with the working class housewife. And they believed that women would never achieve equal pay for jobs outside the home while men could argue that their pay packet had to support a wife and children. 'The Disinherited Family', written when Eleanor Rathbone was in her fifties, was the result of years of organizing, campaigning and lobbying. In it she argued that 'the whole business of begetting, bearing and raising children is the most essential of the nation's businesses', and made a detailed case for financial provision for mothers and children. With government attempts to dismantle the Welfare State in the US, and with women still doing two-thirds of the world's work for less than ten per cent of the world income (United Nations figures), Eleanor Rathbone's case for women's and children's right to claim on the social wealth is essential reading. -- Publisher's description.







Jesus and the Disinherited


Book Description

“No other publication in the twentieth century has upended antiquated theological notions, truncated political ideas, and socially constructed racial fallacies like Jesus and the Disinherited. Thurman’s work keeps showing up on the desk of anti-apartheid activists, South American human rights workers, civil rights champions, and now Black Lives Matter advocates.” –Rev. Otis Moss III, author of Blue Note Preaching in a Post-Soul World and senior pastor at Trinity United Church of Christ A commemorative edition of the work that inspired Martin Luther King Jr. and helped shape the civil rights movement In this beautiful gift edition of the classic theological treatise, complete with a place-marker ribbon and silver gilded edges, celebrated theologian and religious leader Howard Thurman (1899–1981) revolutionizes the way we read the gospel. Thurman lifts Jesus up as a partner in the pain of the oppressed and reveals the gospel as a manual of resistance for the poor and disenfranchised. In this view, the example of Jesus’s life shows us that hatred does not empower—it decays. Only by recognizing fear, deception, contempt, and love of one another can God’s justice prevail. With a new foreword by acclaimed womanist theologian Kelly Brown Douglas, this edition of Jesus and the Disinherited is a timeless testimony of faith that demonstrates how to thrive and flourish in a world that attempts to destroy one’s humanity from the inside out. Having witnessed firsthand the depths of white supremacy and the heights of human civility, Thurman reiterates the inherent dignity of all of God’s children.




The Disinherited Family


Book Description




Family, Law, and Inheritance in America


Book Description

Yvonne Pitts explores nineteenth-century inheritance practices by focusing on testamentary capacity trials in Kentucky in which disinherited family members challenged relatives' wills, claiming the testator lacked the capacity required to write a valid will. By anchoring the study in the history of local communities and the texts of elite jurists, Pitts demonstrates that "capacity" was a term laden with legal meaning and competing communal values.