Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Adoption across Race and Nation: US Histories and Legacies: Formations: Adoption, Kinship, and Culture

Editat de Silke Hackenesch
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 noi 2022
Legacies of (un)belonging have historical roots and resonate across quite different contexts of transracial and transnational adoption. In Adoption across Race and Nation activists, adoptees, and scholars across a range of fields—history, childhood studies, cultural anthropology, gender studies, social policy, and more—ask: What are the experiences of dual-heritage adoptees, and how have configurations of kinship, culture, and identity shaped their lives? How have transnationally and transracially adopted children approached their Americanness, their American whiteness, their American Blackness, their Asian Americanness? How do “border crises” turn “adoptable children” into revenue streams for countries, exposing the vulnerability of immigrant families of color? Offering case studies of post–World War II and Cold War adoptions of Black German and Black Korean children, Adoption across Race and Nation probes the intersections of race and nation as well as immigration and citizenship. It thus demonstrates that in the past as well as today, adoption, nation, and race continue to operate as relational categories with immediate effects on normative notions of family and kinship, belonging, the role of the state, and social welfare.

Contributors: Silke Hackenesch, Laura Briggs, Pamela Anne Quiroz, Eleana J. Kim, Kim Park Nelson, Amy E. Traver, Kori A. Graves, Tracey Owens Patton, Rosemarie H. Peña, Peter Selman
Citește tot Restrânge

Toate formatele și edițiile

Toate formatele și edițiile Preț Express
Paperback (1) 31733 lei  39-44 zile
  Ohio State University Press – 29 noi 2022 31733 lei  39-44 zile
Hardback (1) 70416 lei  6-8 săpt.
  Ohio State University Press – 29 noi 2022 70416 lei  6-8 săpt.

Din seria Formations: Adoption, Kinship, and Culture

Preț: 31733 lei

Nou

Puncte Express: 476

Preț estimativ în valută:
6075 6315$ 5037£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 03-08 februarie 25

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780814258576
ISBN-10: 0814258573
Pagini: 230
Ilustrații: 2 b&w images, 16 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
Seria Formations: Adoption, Kinship, and Culture


Recenzii

Adoption Across Race and Nation is a welcome addition to a growing body of literature exploring race and transnational adoption. … A highly informative edited collection addressing the long history and lasting legacies of transnational and transracial adoptees’ displacement and (un)belonging.” —Hewan Girma, Ethnic and Racial Studies
"Hackenesch astutely crafts a volume that addresses questions of the racialized and gendered intimacies that inform adoption practices. … This collection offers a com- prehensive and keen eye in deconstructing transnational adoption practices by providing a genealogical account of its origins to present-day iterations." —Kimberly D. McKee, Adoption & Culture
Adoption across Race and Nation showcases how intercountry adoption rides the tensions between binaries such as rescue and self-fulfillment, guardianship and consumption, global and local, foreign and native, and right and wrong. A necessary and compelling work, it broadens the significance of adoption studies in both the past and present.” —Tiffany N. Florvil, author of Mobilizing Black Germany: Afro-German Women and the Making of a Transnational Movement

Notă biografică

Silke Hackenesch is Associate Professor at the Institute of North American History in the Department of History, University of Cologne. She is the author of Chocolate and Blackness: A Cultural History.

Extras

Transnational and transracial adoption has become a phenomenon that is rapidly declining in numbers yet highly visible. How adoptive families were and are made has come under intense scrutiny in critical adoption studies over the last two decades, especially with regard to international adoption. Major debates in recent years have addressed the detention of children at the US-Mexican border and their subsequent adoption by American families, adoptees’ citizenship issues and deportation, and the role of Black American families in international adoption since World War II. Many works explore adoption in the contested space between care and consumption, between rescue and self-fulfillment in deeply economically unequal global settings. They illuminate the tensions between legal and cultural citizenship, complicated notions of belonging, and the liminal status of adoptees. While modern adoption is considered child-centered and often framed as serving the “best interest of the child,” the practice of proxy adoptions has been highly contested from its beginnings. Other works demonstrate that the experiences of transnational adoptees explain that questions of belonging and citizenship are racialized. Deportations of adoptees with a criminal record especially expose the fragile and precarious status of adoptee-citizens. Looking at the history of transnational adoption and its emergence after World War II reveals that these contested debates are anything but new. In fact, exploring transnational/transracial adoptions from a historical perspective and taking contemporary issues into account, as this volume does, highlights the centrality of the categories race and nation in adoption discourse and practice. It also reveals adoption as a site of Cold War politics in the past and as a site for immigration and citizenship politics in the present.

The collection is interdisciplinary and multiperspective, bringing together historians, sociologists, anthropologists, and demographers as well as scholars from childhood studies and adoption studies to uncover the contours of adoption. It looks at adoptive parents, at adoptees, at birth mothers and adoption advocates. It integrates well-known case studies of adoptions from Korea, China, and South America with less known ones, such as Black German adoptions. For instance, as Kori Graves shows, when Black Americans adopted Black Korean children during the Korean War, they relied on networks, practices, and news coverage that were in place since the end of World War II, when Black families had adopted Black German children to the US.
By approaching the issues at hand from a diversity of disciplinary perspectives, the essays provide novel scholarship on the emergence of transnational and transracial adoptions and illustrate the repercussions of the past in today’s adoption controversies. All contributors address the close interconnectedness of adoption with race and nation, immigration, poverty, gender, border control, politics, and economics in the (un)making of families.
 

Cuprins

Introduction    Histories and Legacies of Adopting Children across Race and Nation
Chapter 1        The Intimate Politics of Race and Globalization
Chapter 2        US Adoption and Fostering of Immigrants’ Children: A Mirror on Whose Rights Matter
Chapter 3        “Natural Born Aliens”: Transnational Adoptees and US Citizenship
Chapter 4        Cosmopolitan Families: Globalizing Americans’ International Adoptions
Chapter 5        Black American Adoption Advocates and the Origins of Intercountry Adoption
Chapter 6        Love across the Color Line? Pearl S. Buck and the Adoption of Afro-German Children after World War II
Chapter 7        I Want to Show You My New Family: Race, Rejection, and Reunion in Postwar Germany
Chapter 8        Black Germans: Coming Home to Self and Community
Appendix        One Million Children Moving: Seventy Years of Transnational Adoption since the End of World War II

Descriere

Analyzes transnational and transracial adoption, highlighting the past and continuing discourses around adoption as it relates to race, nation, immigration, belonging, and citizenship.