Twelve Step Programs: A Contemporary American Quest for Meaning and Spiritual Renewal
By (Author) Ann Marie Minnick
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1997
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Anthropology
362.29286
Hardback
208
Twelve Step Programs are significant features in the American landscape. Their popularity compels us to take them seriously. This book studies one such program, Al-Anon, which was founded in 1951 by wives of alcoholics who were struggling with the effects of alcoholism on themselves and their families. In the 1990s its scope was broadened to include husbands, grown children, lovers, friends, and anyone else affected by another's drinking or chemical use. This study used an ethnographic approach: it reveals that Al-Anon and similar groups act as sites of spiritual renewal and moral reconstruction for primarily white, middle-class, middle-aged, Protestant Americans who report experiencing a crisis of identity. Investigating Twelve Step Programs lends further insight into the cultural crisis affecting many Americans as well as the strategies some have found to make sense of their lives.
ANN MARIE MINNICK is currently the director of Academic and Student Affairs at James Madison College in Michigan. She teaches in the areas of American culture, career development, and writing.