At a time of increasingly diverse and dynamic debates on the intersections of contemporary LGBTQ rights, trans* visibility, same-sex families, and sexualities education, there is surprisingly little writing on what it means to queer notions of family and kinship networks in global context. Building on the recent wave of scholarship on queerness in families and how families intersect with schools, schooling and educational institutions more broadly, this book considers how we are taught to enact family at home, at school and through the media, and how this pedagogy has shifted and changed over time. Conceived as a collection of keywords that take up the vocabulary of queerness, queering practices, and queer families, the authors employ a nuanced intersectional approach to connect the damaging and persistent invisibility of their subject to the complex and dominant and normalizing discourses of marriage and family. Offering post-structural, post-humanist, and new materialist perspectives on kinship and the family, this book moves the conversation forward by critically interrogating and expanding upon current knowledges about gender diversity, queer kinship, and pedagogy.
Author(s): Anne M. Harris; Stacy Holman Jones; Sandra L. Faulkner; Eloise D. Brook
Series: Routledge Critical Studies in Gender and Sexuality in Education
Edition: Hardback
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 141
City: New York
Tags: queer theory; LGBTQ+
What Have We Learned? Keywords --
1 What Have We Learned? --
Queering Sexuality Education in Family and School: Keywords --
2 Queering Sexuality Education in Family and School --
Un/Queering Family in the Media: Keywords --
3 Un/Queering Family in the Media --
Posthuman Families, Queerly: Keywords --
4 Posthuman Families, Queerly --
Waiting for Queer: Keywords --
5 Waiting for Queer/Performing the Not-Yet Queer Family --
6 Where to Now? --
Author Biographies --
Index.