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Critical Kinship Studies

Contributor(s): Kroløkke, Charlotte (Editor), Myong, Lene (Editor), Adrian, Stine Willum (Editor), Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, Tine (Editor)

ISBN: 9781783484164

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Hardcover
$190.00
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Pub Date: December 18, 2015

Dewey: 306.83

LCCN: 2015031455

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.20" H x 9.10" L x 6.10" W ( 1.55 lbs) 334 pages

Series: Rowman and Littlefield International - Intersections

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: An interdisciplinary investigation into how kinship today is desired, pursued, produced, transformed, and regulated in a world characterized by increased (im)mobility and travel of people, bodies, reproductive substances, knowledge, and expertise.

Brief description: Charlotte Kroløkke is Professor in the Department for the Study of Culture at the University of Southern Denmark. She has worked especially within the fields of computer-mediated communication and third-wave feminist rhetoric on the Internet. She is the Head of Research for the KinTra (Trans)Formations of Kinship research project funded by the Danish Council on the Humanities.

Review Quotes:

"This interdisciplinary and impressive collection of works represents a refreshing contribution to critical kinship studies, and is in all respects up-to-date with our time's diverse ways of creating and sustaining kinship on both a national and transnational level and whether it is about various ART techniques, adoption or surrogacy." --Tobias Hübinette, Associate Professor in Intercultural Studies at Karlstad University

"In a series of well-crafted case studies based on empirical research throughout the Eastern hemisphere, this edited collection brilliantly demonstrates that reproductive technologies and adoption are integral to today's political and economic inequality and the biopolitics of migration. The volume leaves us in no doubt of the urgent need for the critical kinship studies for which the editors call." --Charis Thompson, Chancellor's Professor, UC Berkeley

"By the mid-1980s, kinship studies in anthropology looked as dated and irrelevant as totemism. But by 2001, they had been reinvented and rejuvenated in such works as Sarah Franklin and Susan McKinnon's edited collection, Relative Values (CH, Nov'02, 40-1635), and Maurice Godelier's The Metamorphoses of Kinship (CH, Sep'12, 50-0366). Classic topics such as patrilineal clans disappeared, and research on migration, immigrant communities, and transnationalism demonstrated the significance of kinship. New research on gender, adoption, reproductive technology, new family forms, and same-sex marriage burgeoned. These innovations are linked to the turn of anthropologists toward research into their own societies. This collection carries innovation further. It emphasizes interdisciplinary research and what the editors call "mobility" transnational movement of people, reproductive substances, and kinship understandings as well as international communication through new media. The contributions show how global economic and political inequalities are linked to mobility. The 18 essays are organized into four sections: kinship as substance, as consumption, as political economy, and reimagined. They are all based on field research around the globe and cover such topics as surrogacy, transnational adoption, transnational egg and sperm donation, creation of fictive kinship, and cultural notions of animals as kin. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All college and university libraries." --Choice Reviews

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