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Paperback Transnational Adoption: A Cultural Economy of Race, Gender, and Kinship Book

ISBN: 0814719724

ISBN13: 9780814719725

Transnational Adoption: A Cultural Economy of Race, Gender, and Kinship

(Part of the Nation of Nations: Immigrant History as American History Series)

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Book Overview

Each year, thousands of Chinese children, primarily abandoned infant girls, are adopted by Americans. Yet we know very little about the local and transnational processes that characterize this new migration.
Transnational Adoption is a unique ethnographic study of China/U.S. adoption, the largest contemporary intercountry adoption program. Sara K. Dorow begins by situating the popularity of the China/U.S. adoption process within a broader...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Timely and Accomplished

Transnational Adoption: A Cultural Economy of Race, Gender, and Kinship provides a sociological examination of Americans who adopt Chinese born children and the dynamic but uneven cultural `economy' that shapes their politics of belonging and processes of identification. This book does not set out to describe the practice as an unworthy or untroubled pursuit where individuals are held accountable for either the negatives and positives that can emerge. One of the many admirable characteristics of this book that makes it stand out from most other accounts of adoptive parenting is how it resists representing the practice as a highly individualistic, personal and `fate-driven' endeavor. There is an ongoing need to look beyond more common narratives which heroically position adoptive parents' own ability to love and care as something universal, culture-free and outside hierarchies of racial privilege - whilst failing to move beyond tropes that reify, underestimate and/or denigrate adopted children's cultural heritage, birth parents and communities of birth. Thankfully Dorow's study does not build its narrative from easy but damaging assignments of heroes and villains although we are made aware of how hard it is to resist such stereotyping - such as when she views Americans with Asian babies ready for departure at an airport and her first reaction is that "they're stealing the children". Dorow does not hide her own moral struggles and culturally loaded reactions, and instead makes them transparent and situated in a dialogue with a scholarly process that usefully identifies some of the complex representations of race and ethnicity, as well as relationships of power unfolding in adoption that can be interrogated and challenged by all. The people I had in mind of being able to collaborate with the critical thinking and strategizing on offer in this book includes the ever growing and mostly White middle-class adoptive parents whose considerable commitment to ensuring the well-being of their adopted children should not be taken lightly. The likelihood of adoptive parents being able to engage with the intellectual tone and jargon in this book also shouldn't be underestimated. People who are adopted might experience this book somewhat differently from adoptive parents and the general public. This is not the first account adopted people have of what it's like to be an adoptive parent. It's something they've been able to observe, assess and query for most of their lives and this experience can produce a special (but rarely recognized) kind of expertise on the topic. However, I think that many mature-aged adopted people can still be surprised when looking at how a `new' - and a sometimes younger generation of adoptive parents - are raising overseas born children in an era of greater global connectivity and mobility. I too am keen to have a deeper understanding of adoptive parenting, which is the topic of my dissertation, but I would have liked to

Complex and insightful.

This is, without a doubt, the best book I have read about transnational / transcultural adoption. It includes rich examples from the lives of adopted children and their families and it intelligently and sensitively analyzes the contradictions that surround the strange world of international adoption. I have served as a mentor for adopted teens, and the issues Sara Dorow describes here are very much felt by transcultural adoptees themselves, whether their parents are sensitive to them or not (I've found that many adoptees are terrified to talk to their parents about what they really feel due to deep-seated fears of abandonment). I find it interesting that the one person to give this book a low rating is an adoptive parent, which to me only supports Dorow's points in this book. There are many wonderful adoptive parents out there who knock themselves out to understand their children's struggles, but some parents get defensive and deny the complicated terrain that international adoptees are forced to negotiate in a racially divided America (and world). Adoptive parents need to realize that there are people in the countries of origin who have the legitimate gut reaction, "They're stealing our babies" (and that their children may themselves feel "stolen" at some points). Thank you, Sara Dorow, for your diligent research and careful analysis. This is an important, foundational work.

Fascinating analysis of adoption from China

I have read this book from cover to cover (unlike the author of the review above), and I must say I am deeply impressed with the even-handed, nuanced analysis of this vitally important yet extremely touchy issue. I am an adoptee and a researcher and writer in the area of adoption. Dorow's analysis succeeds in doing what so few books on adoption do: she balances between a critical (in the best sense of the word) appraisal of transnational adoption as a process of child-transfer in a global capitalist marketplace and an empathetic understanding of the life experiences of adoptive families. It is indeed an academic sort of book, but it is also a valuable read for non-academics interested in the issues of race, gender, and kinship that arise in transnational transracial adoption. This book is the most insightful analysis of adoption from China that I have read. I applaud the author for her sensitive discusion, and highly recommend this book for anyone interested in considering the issue in social and cultural context.
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