It's a Setup
Fathering from the Social and Economic Margins
Timothy Black and Sky Keyes
Reviews and Awards
"Scholars of fathering, families, masculinity, policy, and inequalities will find much value in It's a Setup. Although several previous books have tackled similar subjects, Black and Keyes have staked new ground by providing a rich and compassionate account of how fathering from the social and economic margins takes shape in the context of neoliberal capitalism and poverty governance." -- Jennifer Randle, Men & Masculinities
"This fresh and groundbreaking volume is likely the first book-length examination of fathering that takes the legacy of intersectionality seriously, foregrounding the complexity of marginalized men's lives. In the wake of the murder of George Floyd and the mainstream recognition of Black Lives Matter protests, Black and Keyes also utilize structural frameworks and a more explicit critical language than previous fatherhood scholars. These new dimensions embed marginalized fathers in the very structures that have limited their life chances as parents, workers, and partners." -- Kevin Roy, Gender & Society
"Overall, this book makes a strong contribution to the literature on marginalized fathers ... This book is a must read for sociologists who study fathers and families at the economic margins and recommended for all sociologists who want a shining example of contextualizing individual hardships within broader economic and legal systems that are just not created for their success." -- Gayle Kaufman, American Journal of Sociology
"This volume is a sophisticated study of fatherhood on the periphery of society and the quest of low-income men to be engaged and involved fathers, despite the many structural, social, and cultural barriers they experience." -- G.K. Hearn, CHOICE Connect, Vol. 59 No. 8
"Black and Keyes present a well-researched, qualitative study examining the experiences of fatherhood among 138 marginalized men in Connecticut ... The authors thus disrupt the hegemonic discourse surrounding fathers as "sole provider[s]," which has permeated public policies and perceptions of fatherhood. They present a fuller picture of the socioeconomic factors shaping fatherhood, which demands a reconceptualization of the idea today." -- S. Lawson-Clark, CHOICE
"It's A Setup is sociological storytelling at its best: existentially lush, analytically trenchant, and emotionally wrenching. Drawing on a rich set of lifestories and repeated interviews with a multiethnic cohort of marginal men, Black and Keyes take us inside the world of poor fathers like no study before them. By showing how these men struggle to 'man up' and become good fathers in spite of deteriorating economic conditions, punitive welfare, aggressive courts, voracious prisons, and the pull of the streets, they set new standards for the sociology of social marginality, masculinity, and neoliberal public policy at ground level in polarizing America." -Loïc Wacquant, University of California at Berkeley, and author of Body and Soul: Notebooks of an Apprentice Boxer and Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality
"Finally, a book that brings together the array of social and economic processes that undermine the wellbeing of so many fathers in the contemporary United States. From economic restructuring to welfare reform to child support provision to public housing policy, Black and Keyes detail the many obstacles that make poor men so vulnerable as fathers. And they analyze how men continue to struggle and cope as parents with enormous sensitivity and insight. Produced from a unique sociological collaboration, It's a Setup makes an enormous contribution to understandings of the politics of fatherhood and of social inequality more broadly." -Lynne Haney, Professor of Sociology, New York University
"This is the book we have been waiting for: It's a Setup offers a gripping, compelling analysis of the experience of fatherhood for low-income men. Beautifully written, it helps us understand large-scale economic changes, and then does a deep dive into the intimate details of the father's lives: the economic strain a child's birthday brings and the on-going squabbles with the child's mother. Highly recommended." -Annette Lareau, author of Unequal Childhoods