Description

Book Synopsis
In Queer Kinship and Family Change in Taiwan, Amy Brainer provides an in-depth look at queer and transgender family relationships in Taiwan. Brainer is among the first to analyze first-person accounts of heterosexual parents and siblings of LGBT people in a non-Western context.

Trade Review
"Brilliantly researched and elegantly written, Brainer’s study infuses the campaign for equality with a human flavor. We are treated to first-hand accounts of the pressures from coming out and carrying on the family, parenting and cross-generational conflicts, class normativity, and sibling relations. Anchored by Taiwan’s millennial turn, this timely and moving book unveils how integral natal families are to queer individuals’ personal fulfillment and aspiration for social change." -- Howard Chiang * author of After Eunuchs: Science, Medicine, and the Transformation of Sex in Modern China *
"Brainer adds new insights about the ways that queer Asians, specifically Taiwanese, negotiate alternative sexualities and genders within a family context and how members of their families help in this negotiation.” -- Chong-suk Han * author of Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gayasian American *
"A milestone in the understanding of queer kinship, getting family-of-origin experiences into its core, this book takes the reader through a fascinating travel into queer family lives while providing an insightful, decolonising questioning of current meanings of silence and disclosure, choice and responsibility." -- Chiara Bertone * coeditor of Queerying Families of Origin *
"Recommended." * Choice *
WBEZ "Worldview" 'Same-Sex Marriage Legalized in Taiwan' interview with Amy Brainer * WBEZ "Worldview" *
"It is easy to understand why this book won the Ruth Benedict Prize for outstanding contributions to anthropology on LGBT topics: Brainer’s documentation of queer relationships in Taiwanese families successfully challenges the models that have long framed queer subjectivity as a process of individualization....Brainer’s analysis of queer possibilities across an interconnected life course raises important questions for scholars of gender and kinship." * Anthropology & Aging *
"Brilliantly researched and elegantly written, Brainer’s study infuses the campaign for equality with a human flavor. We are treated to first-hand accounts of the pressures from coming out and carrying on the family, parenting and cross-generational conflicts, class normativity, and sibling relations. Anchored by Taiwan’s millennial turn, this timely and moving book unveils how integral natal families are to queer individuals’ personal fulfillment and aspiration for social change." -- Howard Chiang * author of After Eunuchs: Science, Medicine, and the Transformation of Sex in Modern China *
"Brainer adds new insights about the ways that queer Asians, specifically Taiwanese, negotiate alternative sexualities and genders within a family context and how members of their families help in this negotiation.” -- Chong-suk Han * author of Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gayasian American *
"A milestone in the understanding of queer kinship, getting family-of-origin experiences into its core, this book takes the reader through a fascinating travel into queer family lives while providing an insightful, decolonising questioning of current meanings of silence and disclosure, choice and responsibility." -- Chiara Bertone * coeditor of Queerying Families of Origin *
"Recommended." * Choice *
WBEZ "Worldview" 'Same-Sex Marriage Legalized in Taiwan' interview with Amy Brainer * WBEZ "Worldview" *
"It is easy to understand why this book won the Ruth Benedict Prize for outstanding contributions to anthropology on LGBT topics: Brainer’s documentation of queer relationships in Taiwanese families successfully challenges the models that have long framed queer subjectivity as a process of individualization....Brainer’s analysis of queer possibilities across an interconnected life course raises important questions for scholars of gender and kinship." * Anthropology & Aging *

Table of Contents
Contents
  1. Introduction: Bringing Families of Origin into Focus
  2. Meanings of Silence and Disclosure
  3. (Queerly) Carrying on the Family
  4. Gender and Power Across Generations
  5. Strategic Normativity: Sex, Politics, and Parents
  6. Siblings and Family Work
Appendix A: Naming and Language
Appendix B: List of Interviewees

Queer Kinship and Family Change in Taiwan

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    A Hardback by Amy Brainer

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      View other formats and editions of Queer Kinship and Family Change in Taiwan by Amy Brainer

      Publisher: Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 11/01/2019
      ISBN13: 9780813597614, 978-0813597614
      ISBN10: 0813597617

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Queer Kinship and Family Change in Taiwan, Amy Brainer provides an in-depth look at queer and transgender family relationships in Taiwan. Brainer is among the first to analyze first-person accounts of heterosexual parents and siblings of LGBT people in a non-Western context.

      Trade Review
      "Brilliantly researched and elegantly written, Brainer’s study infuses the campaign for equality with a human flavor. We are treated to first-hand accounts of the pressures from coming out and carrying on the family, parenting and cross-generational conflicts, class normativity, and sibling relations. Anchored by Taiwan’s millennial turn, this timely and moving book unveils how integral natal families are to queer individuals’ personal fulfillment and aspiration for social change." -- Howard Chiang * author of After Eunuchs: Science, Medicine, and the Transformation of Sex in Modern China *
      "Brainer adds new insights about the ways that queer Asians, specifically Taiwanese, negotiate alternative sexualities and genders within a family context and how members of their families help in this negotiation.” -- Chong-suk Han * author of Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gayasian American *
      "A milestone in the understanding of queer kinship, getting family-of-origin experiences into its core, this book takes the reader through a fascinating travel into queer family lives while providing an insightful, decolonising questioning of current meanings of silence and disclosure, choice and responsibility." -- Chiara Bertone * coeditor of Queerying Families of Origin *
      "Recommended." * Choice *
      WBEZ "Worldview" 'Same-Sex Marriage Legalized in Taiwan' interview with Amy Brainer * WBEZ "Worldview" *
      "It is easy to understand why this book won the Ruth Benedict Prize for outstanding contributions to anthropology on LGBT topics: Brainer’s documentation of queer relationships in Taiwanese families successfully challenges the models that have long framed queer subjectivity as a process of individualization....Brainer’s analysis of queer possibilities across an interconnected life course raises important questions for scholars of gender and kinship." * Anthropology & Aging *
      "Brilliantly researched and elegantly written, Brainer’s study infuses the campaign for equality with a human flavor. We are treated to first-hand accounts of the pressures from coming out and carrying on the family, parenting and cross-generational conflicts, class normativity, and sibling relations. Anchored by Taiwan’s millennial turn, this timely and moving book unveils how integral natal families are to queer individuals’ personal fulfillment and aspiration for social change." -- Howard Chiang * author of After Eunuchs: Science, Medicine, and the Transformation of Sex in Modern China *
      "Brainer adds new insights about the ways that queer Asians, specifically Taiwanese, negotiate alternative sexualities and genders within a family context and how members of their families help in this negotiation.” -- Chong-suk Han * author of Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gayasian American *
      "A milestone in the understanding of queer kinship, getting family-of-origin experiences into its core, this book takes the reader through a fascinating travel into queer family lives while providing an insightful, decolonising questioning of current meanings of silence and disclosure, choice and responsibility." -- Chiara Bertone * coeditor of Queerying Families of Origin *
      "Recommended." * Choice *
      WBEZ "Worldview" 'Same-Sex Marriage Legalized in Taiwan' interview with Amy Brainer * WBEZ "Worldview" *
      "It is easy to understand why this book won the Ruth Benedict Prize for outstanding contributions to anthropology on LGBT topics: Brainer’s documentation of queer relationships in Taiwanese families successfully challenges the models that have long framed queer subjectivity as a process of individualization....Brainer’s analysis of queer possibilities across an interconnected life course raises important questions for scholars of gender and kinship." * Anthropology & Aging *

      Table of Contents
      Contents
      1. Introduction: Bringing Families of Origin into Focus
      2. Meanings of Silence and Disclosure
      3. (Queerly) Carrying on the Family
      4. Gender and Power Across Generations
      5. Strategic Normativity: Sex, Politics, and Parents
      6. Siblings and Family Work
      Appendix A: Naming and Language
      Appendix B: List of Interviewees

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