The Privilege to Feel
Description
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From Stephanie Land, critically acclaimed author of bestselling memoirs Maid and Class, a series of autobiographical essays based on the bureaucratic forms that shaped her life. An exploration of the trauma of poverty and finding hope in the face of an American system increasingly devoid of compassion.
People struggling to make ends meet are governed by forms that request information in flat, declarative language. Vehicle make and model. Previous hospitalizations. They have no space for what the answers actually hold. Asking if the applicant is pregnant doesn't ask how many times they've tried or how scared they are to hope. The reasons for the hospitalizations. The night a teenager's first car was totaled. The years it took to recover from each of them.
In her third book, Stephanie Land offers a collection of essays, using those emotionless, bureaucratic prompts to tell the stories behind them. Written from the other side of recognition and a public reckoning with poverty, these essays move through a high school car accident and its decades-long aftermath: a hospitalization for a diagnosis left untreated, and insurmountable medical bills that resulted in bankruptcy. As she serves coffee by day while chasing dreams of being a college student and a writer, she asks: Who gets to be tended to? Who gets a gentle hand on the shoulder in an emergency room? Who gets a teacher who believes in them? Who gets to hurt, grieve, fall apart, be angry, and be cared for with dignity and without being processed? Forms dictate which aspects of her life can be checked off in a box and reduced to data. The essays insist on telling the stories that can't.
The Privilege to Feel is a book about what survives the paperwork, and about the harder, more expensive work of finally letting yourself admit you need something after spending a lifetime being told you don't deserve to.
More details
Person
Stephanie Land is an author and activist whose writing focuses on parenting under the poverty line. Her debut book Maid was a New York Times bestseller and adapted into a limited series on Netflix. Class, her second book, was a GMA book club pick and was shortlisted for the Reading the West award in Biography/Memoir. Her writing on social and economic justice has been published widely, and she speaks nationally about the daily realities faced by those kept in the margins. She lives in Montana with her two children.
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