"It Came, Over and Over, Down to This: What Made Someone a Mother?": A Reproductive Justice Analysis of Little Fires Everywhere

Kimberly D. McKee, Shannon Gibney
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Abstract

Abstract: Ideologies of motherhood reflect the complexities and contradictions of what it means to be seen as a worthy parent—someone who deserves to care for children—in contrast to those deemed unworthy or undesirable. The family is a site of contestation when accounting for the ways maternalism and white supremacy affect racialized family systems in the lives of people of color in white American suburbia. In a critical engagement with the 2017 novel Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng and the 2020 Hulu -released series by the same name, this essay reveals the contours of non-normative kinship formations, including surrogacy and adoption. These kinship ties demonstrate the tensions of motherhood as a gendered, raced, and classed phenomena. A reproductive justice framework reveals the way Little Fires Everywhere —the novel and the series—demonstrate the legibility and legitimacy of some families over others in exploring the contingencies of kinship.
“它一次又一次地归结为:是什么让一个人成为母亲?”:到处都是小火灾的生殖正义分析
摘要:母亲的意识形态反映了作为一个有价值的父母——一个值得照顾孩子的父母——与那些被认为不值得或不受欢迎的父母的意义的复杂性和矛盾。当考虑到母性主义和白人至上主义对美国白人郊区有色人种生活中种族化的家庭制度的影响时,家庭是一个争论的场所。本文对2017年塞莱斯特·吴(Celeste Ng)的小说《到处都是小火》(Little Fires Everywhere)和2020年Hulu推出的同名电视剧进行了批判性的探讨,揭示了包括代孕和收养在内的非规范亲属关系形成的轮廓。这些亲属关系表明了母性作为一种性别、种族和阶级现象的紧张关系。一个生殖正义的框架揭示了《到处都是小火》——小说和系列——在探索亲属关系的偶然性时,展示了一些家庭的易读性和合法性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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