Dancing at the edge : confessions of a female traveler

This memoir is a collection of attempts to search for a personal anchorage or home. It is a decidedly female journey for a woman's place in the world. The manuscript details the quest of a female journalist for a sense of wholeness following a childhood with a mentally ill mother. It consists o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: DeQuine, Jeanne
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2773
Description
Summary:This memoir is a collection of attempts to search for a personal anchorage or home. It is a decidedly female journey for a woman's place in the world. The manuscript details the quest of a female journalist for a sense of wholeness following a childhood with a mentally ill mother. It consists of three parts: the first, an account of childhood; the second, a narrative of a search "on the road" during a journalism career; and, third, an interior quest for a life context that included faith. The journey wound through Latin America, the Caribbean, and Southwest Asia. What is "home"? Is it family? God? A sense of safety? For me, the need to know emerged in childhood. It included a spiritual quest for a higher power that eluded me as a shadow fled the sun. In adulthood, travels for my work pushed the question as I saw how others answered these questions. The search took me to Taos, New Mexico, where I sought a vision of my death, to Bangladesh, where I learned first hand about women's suppression, and to Lima, Peru, where I believed death by terrorist to be imminent. My quest carried me further into the practice of Buddhism. It became a search for a greater "presence" I was unable to define. It continued through the death of my Alzheimer's iv afflicted mother. The journey, though full of adventure, held answers that often seemed beyond my grasp. Or so I thought. Ultimately, the search turned out to be an inside job.