Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £17.49 GBP
Regular price Sale price £17.49 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 10 days lead

Bloodlines
Adoption, Crime, and the Search for Belonging

How does examining adoption and crime reveal our fears of family formations, bloodlines, and ancestry?

Jinny Huh (Author)

9781009360968, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 30 January 2025

72 pages
23 x 15.1 x 0.4 cm, 0.122 kg

This study explores the relationship between crime fiction and adoption. A primary goal of this study is to investigate how the adoption trope reveals current cultural fears and fascination with kinship formations and essentialist notions of belonging, DNA and ancestry searches, and the controversial practice of adoption. Popular fiction, namely crime/detective fiction and the subgenre of adoption crime fiction, reflect scholarly debates within the field of Critical Adoption Studies, including but not limited to the ethics behind the adoption industrial complex and calls for its demise, struggles for reproductive justice, and redefinitions of parenting and kinship formations evidenced by LGBTQ and racialized identities. Another goal of this study is to highlight adoptee and birthparent voices and perspectives, illustrating how genre fiction can help to agitate for more inclusive representation. By intersecting elements of crime into the adoption story, these narratives illuminate the human cost and condition of current adoption practices.

Introduction
1. The Fears and Failures of Adoption
2. Beyond the Single Adoption Story
3. On DNA, Searching, and Belonging
Coda.

Subject Areas: Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH]

View full details