The Red Thread: Adoptee Formations of Kinship and Queer Diasporic Traditions in Chinese America

dc.contributor.advisorLuk, Sharon
dc.contributor.advisorMartinez, Ernesto
dc.contributor.advisorRovak, Angela
dc.contributor.authorNeher, Alayna
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-12T20:34:00Z
dc.date.available2022-07-12T20:34:00Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractChinese American adoptees exist in relationships that transcend racial, gendered, and physical borders as part of a tradition of non-normative kinship. Given the diasporic history of transnational adoption, Chinese adoptees seek meaningful relationships with one another to reconcile family and process diasporic trauma. Close relationships between adoptees provide foundational support through shared experiences. In-depth interviews were conducted with 19 adult adoptees (18 women, 1 man; ages 18-26), all of whom were born in China and adopted to the United States. Instead of generalizable results, research shows kinships are deeply complex and personal, which allows adoption discourse to settle into nuance. Adoptees are simultaneously generous and critical of parents when it comes to upbringing, conversations about race, and feelings of home and belonging, which accentuates the contradictory nature of adoptee experiences. Queer relationships with other adoptees (adoptee-adoptee) are particularly important for humanizing adoptee experiences, providing space for fluid identities, and coalition-building. Adoptee relationships form a constellation of kinships and restructure Asian American identity as political.en_US
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0001-6747-1892
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1794/27389
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherUniversity of Oregon
dc.rightsCC BY-NC-ND 4.0
dc.subjectadoptionen_US
dc.subjectadopteeen_US
dc.subjectkinshipen_US
dc.subjectdiasporaen_US
dc.subjectqueeren_US
dc.titleThe Red Thread: Adoptee Formations of Kinship and Queer Diasporic Traditions in Chinese America
dc.typeThesis/Dissertation

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