Contingent kinship : the flows and futures of adoption in the United States
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Contingent kinship : the flows and futures of adoption in the United States
(Atelier: ethnographic inquiry in the twenty-first century, 2)
University of California Press, c2019
- : pbk
Available at / 2 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 231-247) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Based on ethnographic fieldwork at a small Chicago adoption agency specializing in transracial adoption, Contingent Kinship charts the entanglement of institutional structures and ideologies of family, race, and class to argue that adoption is powerfully implicated in the question of who can have a future in the twenty-first-century United States. With a unique focus on the role that social workers and other professionals play in mediating relationships between expectant mothers and prospective adopters, Kathryn A. Mariner develops the concept of "intimate speculation," a complex assemblage of investment, observation, and anticipation that shapes the adoption process into an elaborate mechanism for creating, dissolving, and exchanging imagined futures. Shifting the emphasis from adoption's outcome to its conditions of possibility, this insightful ethnography places the practice of domestic adoption within a temporal, economic, and affective framework in order to interrogate the social inequality and power dynamics that render adoption-and the families it produces-possible.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Introduction: To Speculate Intimately
1 * Suspect and Spectral (M)others
2 * Protective Inspections
3 * Temporal Uncertainties
4 * Kinship's Costs
5 * Closure
Conclusion: Intimacy's Intricacies
Notes
References
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"