"Tracks the Japanese social experiments in kinship undertaken by foster and adoptive parents, alums of state care, and caregivers in child welfare institutions, along with the visceral ways people perceive and experience kinship ties and their absences as a form of embodied life"-- Provided by publisher.
"Tracks the Japanese social experiments in kinship undertaken by foster and adoptive parents, alums of state care, and caregivers in child welfare institutions, along with the visceral ways people perceive and experience kinship ties and their absences as a form of embodied life"-- Provided by publisher.
Kathryn E. Goldfarb is a cultural and medical anthropologist. Her research focuses on the ways social relationships shape embodied experience, intersections between public policy and well-being, and the coproduction of scientific knowledge and subjective experiences, including narrative creation. She is the coeditor of Difficult Attachments.
Inhaltsangabe
Producing People who have No One Kinship Technologies Approximating a Household Normal Aspirations Materializing Relationships The Politics of Chance Knowledge and Narration Conclusion
Producing People who have No One Kinship Technologies Approximating a Household Normal Aspirations Materializing Relationships The Politics of Chance Knowledge and Narration Conclusion
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