Belonging in an Adopted World
Race, Identity, and Transnational Adoption
Belonging in an Adopted World
Race, Identity, and Transnational Adoption
Since the early 1990s, transnational adoptions have increased at an astonishing rate, not only in the United States, but worldwide. In Belonging in an Adopted World, Barbara Yngvesson offers a penetrating exploration of the consequences and implications of this unprecedented movement of children, usually from poor nations to the affluent West. Yngvesson illuminates how the politics of adoption policy has profoundly affected the families, nations, and children involved in this new form of social and economic migration.
Starting from the transformation of the abandoned child into an adoptable resource for nations that give and receive children in adoption, this volume examines the ramifications of such gifts, especially for families created through adoption and later, the adopted adults themselves. Bolstered by an account of the author’s own experience as an adoptive parent, and fully attuned to the contradictions of race that shape our complex forms of family, Belonging in an Adopted World explores the fictions that sustain adoptive kinship, ultimately exposing the vulnerability and contingency behind all human identity.
264 pages | 16 halftones, 2 line drawings, 9 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2010
Chicago Series in Law and Society
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
Law and Legal Studies: International Law, Law and Society
Sociology: Individual, State and Society
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
A Letter
Prologue
Chapter 1. The Safehouse of Identity
Chapter 2. The Only Thing We Can Give Away Is Children
Chapter 3. National Resources
Chapter 4. A Child of Any Color
Chapter 5. Early Disturbances
Chapter 6. The Body within the Body
Chapter 7. Return
Epilogue
Appendix: Tables
References
IndexBe the first to know
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