Kinship norms in Aotearoa New Zealand are inherently heteronormative, constructed out of the settler colonial ideal that a heterosexual couple with children in a nuclear family are the ultimate social unit. This thesis outlines queer experiences of motherhood given this context, highlighting the ways queer people engage with family narratives that implicitly exclude them. By drawing on the stories of six queer individuals, I trace these engagements through the adoption and foster system, usage of assisted reproductive technologies, and finding a sense of belonging and community. In each of these contexts, my participants subvert, reject, and reproduce, heteronormative understandings of family. These accounts primarily draw from in-depth int...
In this chapter, we bring queer theory into dialogue with critical race studies. We ask “How does th...
How are new relationalities formed? By what methods are kinship/family claims made? How are gender a...
Parenting in queer families calls into question some of our most fundamental assumptions: that paren...
Kinship norms in Aotearoa New Zealand are inherently heteronormative, constructed out of the settler...
As many as one in four New Zealanders experience infertility. Some choose to pursue surrogacy as an ...
Within society there are many varieties of family arrangements, however some New Zealand social poli...
Queer (i.e., lesbian, gay, bisexual) families are becoming increasingly visible in the United States...
The practice of traditional surrogacy gives rise to multiple discourses around women’s autonomy and ...
The authors set out to produce a text that contributes to the under-researched topics of sexualities...
In this thesis I examine civil unions from the perspective of New Zealand-based same-sex couples who...
Gay fathers are creating family forms and parenting practices that reach beyond the nuclear family m...
This dissertation focuses on the processes of negotiating and redrawing concepts of relatedness, kin...
Inspired in the work of Kath Weston and other anthropologists working principally in the United Sta...
The global advent of assisted human reproduction has brought with it an upheaval in social, cultural...
This thesis explores how kinship is enacted in the context of gay men pursuingparenthood through sur...
In this chapter, we bring queer theory into dialogue with critical race studies. We ask “How does th...
How are new relationalities formed? By what methods are kinship/family claims made? How are gender a...
Parenting in queer families calls into question some of our most fundamental assumptions: that paren...
Kinship norms in Aotearoa New Zealand are inherently heteronormative, constructed out of the settler...
As many as one in four New Zealanders experience infertility. Some choose to pursue surrogacy as an ...
Within society there are many varieties of family arrangements, however some New Zealand social poli...
Queer (i.e., lesbian, gay, bisexual) families are becoming increasingly visible in the United States...
The practice of traditional surrogacy gives rise to multiple discourses around women’s autonomy and ...
The authors set out to produce a text that contributes to the under-researched topics of sexualities...
In this thesis I examine civil unions from the perspective of New Zealand-based same-sex couples who...
Gay fathers are creating family forms and parenting practices that reach beyond the nuclear family m...
This dissertation focuses on the processes of negotiating and redrawing concepts of relatedness, kin...
Inspired in the work of Kath Weston and other anthropologists working principally in the United Sta...
The global advent of assisted human reproduction has brought with it an upheaval in social, cultural...
This thesis explores how kinship is enacted in the context of gay men pursuingparenthood through sur...
In this chapter, we bring queer theory into dialogue with critical race studies. We ask “How does th...
How are new relationalities formed? By what methods are kinship/family claims made? How are gender a...
Parenting in queer families calls into question some of our most fundamental assumptions: that paren...