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Imprint of Another Life: Adoption Narratives and Human Possibility [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 481 g, 7 B&W illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Jan-2015
  • Leidėjas: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472036343
  • ISBN-13: 9780472036349
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 481 g, 7 B&W illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Jan-2015
  • Leidėjas: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472036343
  • ISBN-13: 9780472036349
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The Imprint of Another Life: Adoption Narratives and Human Possibility addresses a series of questions about common beliefs about adoption. Underlying these beliefs is the assumption that human qualities are innate and intrinsic, an assumption often held by adoptees and their families, sometimes at great emotional cost. This book explores representations of adoptiontransracial, transnational, and domestic same-race adoptionthat reimagine human possibility by questioning this assumption and conceiving of alternatives.

Literary scholar Margaret Homans examines fiction makings special relationship to themes of adoption, an as if form of family making, fabricated or fictional instead of biological or real. Adoption has tended to generate stories rather than uncover bedrock truths. Adoptive families are made, not born; in the words of novelist Jeanette Winterson, adopted children are self-invented because we have to be. In attempting to recover their lost histories and identities, adoptees create new stories about themselves. While some believe that adoptees cannot be whole unless they reconnect with their origins, others believe that privileging biology reaffirms hierarchies (such as those of race) that harm societies and individuals. Adoption is lived and represented through an irresolvable tension between belief in the innate nature of human traits and belief in their constructedness, contingency, and changeability. The book shows some of the ways in which literary creation, and a concept of adoption as a form of creativity, manages this tension.

The texts examined include fiction (e.g., classic novels such as Silas Marner, What Maisie Knew, and Beloved); memoirs by adoptees, adoptive parents, and birthmothers; drama, documentary films, advice manuals, social science writing; and published interviews with adoptees, parents, and birth parents. Along the way the book tracks the quests of adoptees who, whether or not they meet their original families, must construct their own stories rather than finding them; follows transnational adoptees as they return, hopes held high, to Korea and China; looks over the shoulders of a generation of girls adopted from China as they watch Disneys iconic Mulan, with its alluring story of destiny written on the skin; and listens to birthmothers as they struggle to tell painful secrets held for decades.

This book engages in debates within adoption studies, womens and gender studies, transnational studies, and ethnic studies; it will appeal to literary scholars and critics, including specialists in memoir or narrative theory, and to general readers interested in adoption and in race.

Recenzijos

Gracefully written and drawing on a thorough command of the critical and primary literature in its field, The Imprint of Another Life shows a willingness to engage with uncomfortable questions and, when necessary, to take controversial positions. . . . This book should attract considerable attention from scholars in adoption studies, race/ethnic studies, gender studies, and ethics. Claudia Nelson, Texas A&M University

Introduction: "Something More and Less than Kinship" 1(23)
Chapter 1 Money and Love
24(88)
Falling-in-Love and the Unseen Economy in Recent Adoption Narratives
24(34)
The Value of a Child: Silas Marner's Gold, the Baby with Golden Curls, and Eppie's Useless Garden
58(28)
Maisie's Profit, Our Profit: The Gold Coin, the Ten-Pound Note, The High Gilt Virgin, and the Medal of So Strange an Alloy
86(26)
Chapter 2 Searches and Origins
112(66)
Creating Origins in Narrative Theory, Trauma Theory, and Adoption Narratives
114(12)
Invented Authenticity and Origins in Recent American Adoption Fiction
126(24)
Return Memoirs and Fictive Origins
150(28)
Chapter 3 Marked Bodies and Identity
178(72)
Is What You Look Like Who You Are? Visible Race, Marked Blood, Family Resemblance, and the Uncertainty of Adopted Identity
187(28)
Marks of Loss: Scars, Scarwords, Love Marks, and Melancholic Identity
215(32)
Chosen Marks
247(3)
Chapter 4 "The Mother Who Isn't One"
250(36)
Silence
250(14)
Birthmother Subjectivity
264(11)
The Birthmother's Plot
275(11)
Afterword: "The Imprint of Another Life" 286(9)
Index 295
Margaret Homans is Professor of English and of Womens, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Yale University.