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Getting Out:

Life Stories of Women who Left Abusive Men
Front Cover
1 Review
Columbia University Press, 1999 - Family & Relationships - 286 pages

Each year, more than 2.5 million cases of battering are reported in the Unites States, and as many as 2,000 incidents of abuse turn into murder cases. Every month, more than 50,000 women in the United States seek restraining or protection orders. While many books detail distinguishing characteristics of the abusive relationship, few accounts reveal how some women eventually gather the resources and courage to leave.

In a chronicle by turns harrowing and inspiring, Ann Goetting tells how sixteen women finally got away for good. Getting Out recounts not only the stories of their abuse but also the women's life histories leading up to the battering -- and the resources they drew upon to escape.

Some of the women here received assistance from compassionate family members -- Lee, for instance, secured support from her parents, who scheduled a holiday trip home for her to get her away from her husband, Tony, whose battering had reached life-threatening dimensions as he became progressively more involved with an outlaw motorcycle gang. Others were saved by a network of friends -- Israeli-born Netiva married an American and escaped after a group of fellow graduate students helped break down the isolation that held her captive.

As Goetting explains, leaving is a process rather than an event, often marked along the way by reconciliations and resumption of abuse. But as she and her informants suggest, the process invariably extends back to a critical moment when a decision to leave is made. The life-affirming moment may follow a particularly appalling episode of abuse or arrive in a long-repressed recognition of self-worth garnered from a positive experience at work or in the rearing of a child.

Getting Out is a book that some women may read to discover solutions to problems within their own lives and those of people they know. It is also a work that social workers and psychologists who deal with battered women will find singularly informative, and one that will find an audience of readers seeking to understand the lives of women involved with abusive men.

  

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Review: Getting Out: Life Stories Of Women Who Left Abusive Men

User Review  - Sarah - Goodreads

This book provides 16 different accounts of women who have survived Domestic Violence situations. I read the book in order to give myself a basis for counseling survivors. While some of the stories ... Read full review

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Contents

Jan
27
Netiva
41
NOR ARE CHILDREN
57
Kimberly
59
Jessica
73
A TWOTIMING BATTERER
87
Rebecca Singing Water
89
Emily
105
Gretchen
165
WHEN THE SYSTEM WORKS
181
Raquelle
183
Lucretia
197
Colette
213
LEGACIES OF LOSS AND DEATH
231
Blanca
233
Judy
249

FAMILY AND FRIENDS TO THE RESCUE
119
Lee
121
Annette
135
FACES OF SHELTER LIFE
149
Sharon
151
Freda
263
A Message for Battered Women
277
References
283
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References from web pages

JSTOR: Getting out: Life Stories of Women Who Left Abusive Men
Getting Out: Life Stories of Women Who Left Abusive Men. By Ann Goetting. New York: Columbia University Press, 1999, 286 pp., $24.95 (cloth), $15.95 (paper) ...
links.jstor.org/ sici?sici=0891-2432(200112)15%3A6%3C939%3AGOLSOW%3E2.0.CO%3B2-D

Getting Out: Life Stories of Women Who Left Abusive Men by Ann ...
Each year, more than 2.5 million cases of battering are reported in the Unites States, and as many as 2000 incidents of abuse turn into murder cases
www.questia.com/ library/ book/ getting-out-life-stories-of-women-who-left-abusive-men-by-ann-goetting.jsp

Diane Shoos - Representing Domestic Violence: Ambivalence and ...
Getting Out: Life Stories of Women Who Left Abusive Men. New York: Columbia University Press. Gordon, Linda. 1991. "On Difference." Genders 10(1):91-111. ...
muse.jhu.edu/ journals/ nwsa_journal/ v015/ 15.2shoos.html

Violence, HIV/AIDS, and Native American Women in the Twenty-First ...
Ann Goetting, Getting Out: Life Stories of Women Who Left Abusive Men (New York:. Columbia University Press, 1999), 100. 47. Nancy Goldstein and Jennifer ...
aisc.metapress.com/ index/ B657052404183151.pdf

About the author (1999)

Ann Goetting is professor of sociology at Western Kentucky University. She is the author of "Homicide in Families and Other Special Populations" and coeditor, with Sarah Fenstermaker, of "Individual Voices, Collective Visions: Fifty Years of Women in Sociology.

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