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Kinning: The Creation of Life Trajectories in Transnational Adoptive Families

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Kinning: The Creation of Life Trajectories in Transnational Adoptive Families
Author(s)Howell, Signe
AbstractWith empirical material obtained from a study of transnational adoption in Norway, an argument is made for the concept of kinning. By this is meant a process by which a foetus, new-born child, or any previously unconnected person, is brought into a significant and permanent relationship that is expressed in a kin idiom. Through a focus on adoption within a cultural setting that emphasizes the flesh and blood metaphor as central for kinship, the ambiguities and contradictions embedded in the relationship between biological and social relatedness are thrown into sharp relief. Questions of race and ethnicity also become pertinent to the kinning drama of adoptive parents which involves, it is argued, a process of transubstantiation of the adopted child.
IssueNo3
Pages465-484
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
VolumeNo9
PubDateSeptember 2003
ISBN_ISSN1359-0987

Family and Kinship

  • Ascription and Social Identity
  • Capitalism / Westernization
  • Child-Bearing
  • Comparative Kinship
  • Demographic Trends and Policy
  • Domestic Violence
  • Evolution of the Family / Family Structure
  • Family, Race, and Nation
  • Gender Inequality
  • Gender, Work, and Family
  • Globalization
  • Marriage
  • Modernization and Family Change
  • Social Context / Social Policy
  • Well-Being and Family


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