Calendar - Event View
This is the "Event Detail" view, showing all available information for this event.
If the event has passed, click the "Event Report" icon to read a report and view photos that were uploaded.
Arts & Culture Series Program - Stolen Pride, with Arlie Hochschild
Event Contact(s)
Irene Marcos
Category
Arts & Culture Series
Registration Info
Registration is recommended
About this event
RSVP:
To attend in person:
email info@ashbyvillage.org or call 510-204-9200 to register (capacity is limited to 120 people)
To watch by livestream:
click here to register for a Zoom link
When: Sunday, October 13, 2024 2:00pm - 4:00pm PT
Where: Epworth United Methodist Church, 1953 Hopkins Street, Berkeley
Open to: All
Accessibility: Epworth has a ramp on the street at the East end of the property and, on the first floor, there is an elevator accessible by entering through the office on Hopkins
Ashby Village Arts & Culture Series and Epworth United Methodist Church Present
Stolen Pride
National Book Award Finalist and Bestselling Author
Arlie Hochschild
in conversation with friend and colleague Dr. Troy Duster,
Professor Emeritus at UC Berkeley and past President
of the American Sociological Association
In her latest book, Stolen Pride, Arlie Russell Hochschild offers an original contribution to the national conversation on bridging what divides us and healing our nation.
For all the efforts to understand the state of American politics and the blue/red divide, Hochschild believes that we’ve ignored what economic and cultural loss can do to an overlooked and powerful human feeling: pride – especially, among men.
Hochschild’s research drew her to Pike County in the heart of Appalachia, the whitest and second poorest Congressional District in the nation. Its residents faced a perfect storm: jobs in the coal industry left, crushing poverty persisted, and a deadly drug crisis struck the region harder than anywhere else in the country.
This book makes an important contribution to the understanding of our times – a glimmer of hope for our fragile democracy.