ABSTRACT

This edited collection applies kinship as an analytical concept to better understand the affective economies, discursive practices, and aesthetic dimensions through which cultural narratives of belonging establish a sense of intimacy and affiliation. In North American and European ethnic literatures, kinship has several social functions: negotiating diasporic belonging in and outside of the perimeters of bloodlines and genealogy; positioning queer-feminist interventions to counter ethno-nationalist narratives of belonging; challenging liberal sentimentalist narratives, such as those grafted onto the bodies of transnational adoptees; re-formulating cultural heterogeneity through interracial and interethnic kinship constellations outside either post-racial assumptions about colorblindness or celebrations of racial and ethnic pluralism. In all of these cases, kinship features as a common theme through which contemporary authors attend to challenges of conscribing individuals into inclusive, counter-hegemonic cultural narratives of belonging.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

Theorizing Kinship and Ethnicity in Contemporary North American and European Literature

part |44 pages

Familiar/Familial Kinship

chapter 1|17 pages

From Familiar to Familial

Gloria Anzaldúa’s Queer Rhetorical Kinship

chapter 2|13 pages

From China to Cuba, and Back

The Conundrums of Ethnic Identity and Kinship in Cristina García’s Monkey Hunting

chapter 3|12 pages

In Praise of the Kitchen Poet

Cooking as Kinship in Ethnic Culinary Memoirs

part |58 pages

Kinship States

chapter 4|13 pages

Beyond Kinship and National Identity

Ika Hügel-Marshall’s Daheim Unterwegs: Ein Deutsches Leben

chapter 5|13 pages

Care, Intimacy, and Kinship

Rethinking Traditional Narratives of the Family in Adrian Tomine’s “A Brief History of the Art Form Known as ‘Hortisculpture’”

chapter 6|16 pages

Narratives of Intimacy

Ethnic Nationalism, Kinship, and Sexuality in Contemporary Bosnian-Herzegovinian Literature

chapter 7|14 pages

Paper Families and Absent Motherhood

Fae Myenne Ng’s Steer Toward Rock

part |37 pages

Loss as Kinship

chapter 8|13 pages

“In between names and grass and murmuring”

Queer Diasporic Mourning and Kinship in Dionne Brand’s In Another Place, Not Here

chapter 9|13 pages

Kinship Patterns and Practices

Joseph Boyden’s The Orenda and the Limits of Reconciliation in Canada

chapter 10|9 pages

Kinship Between Transracial Adoptees

A Case for the Kinship of Loss