Queer kinship: South African perspectives on the sexual politics of family-making and belonging
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2019
TITLE EDITOR(S): T.Morison, ILynch, V.Reddy
SOURCE EDITOR(S): 00, 00, 00
KEYWORDS: FAMILY PLANNING, FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS, SEXUALITY, SOCIAL INCLUSION
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 10778
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/13617
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/13617
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
The authors set out to produce a text that contributes to the under-researched topics of sexualities, families, and reproduction in South Africa. Their aims were to expand upon the nascent scholarship on queer/LGBTI families (notably the germinal volume Home Affairs by Lubbe-De Beer & Marnell 2013), especially by addressing particular gaps in the scholarship, viz. work that includes gay men, consideration of 'non-heterosexual' reproductive decision-making, and the inclusion of race, class, and rurality into analyses. They believe that this book fulfils these intentions, but also provokes thinking about intimate relationships and belonging more broadly. If, as Butler has asserted, kinship is always already heterosexual, then can the Queer, the 'Others', ever comfortably seek belonging within the bounds of existing kinship and family structures? This text offers some thought-provoking insights into this issue. It not only responds to the paucity of empirical research on the topic (of what we have conceptualised as 'queer kinship', which many of the authors point to, but also contributes to 'systematic thinking about familial relations, reproduction and citizenship' (Turner 2008:45), located in the South African context.-
Related Research Outputs:
- Sexual and gender diversity and belonging: a decolonial research agenda
- Families and inclusive societies in Africa
- Queer kinship: South African perspectives on the sexual politics of family-making and belonging
- Rapid appraisal of social inclusion policies in selected sub-Saharan African countries
- Review: world economic and social survey 2009: promoting development, saving the planet
- South Africans' attitudes to social integration in schools
- Deconstructing density: strategic dilemmas confronting the post-apartheid city
- Awareness and use of and barriers to family planning services among female university students in Lesotho
- Students' views regarding the social and learning environment of disabled students at the University of Venda, South Africa
- Book review: Pini, B. & Leach, B. (eds). 2011. Reshaping gender and class in rural spaces. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978 1 4094 0291 6
- Social polarisation and migration to Johannesburg
- Family structure
- Gendered naming and values attached to amaXhosa Amakrwala (graduate-initiates)
- Male circumcision: the determinant of social acceptance
- Cracks of light: social restitution for South Africa's future
- Social inequality, prejudice and discrimination are driving HIV
- Scaling up family planning to reduce maternal and child mortality: the potential costs and benefits of modern contraceptive use in South Africa
- Social movements, media practices and radical democracy in South Africa
- Comprehensive report: a research framework on gender and socio-cultural inclusion in global change research
- HIV/AIDS, inequality and social justice in South Africa