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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: SooJin PatePublisher: University of Minnesota Press Imprint: University of Minnesota Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.358kg ISBN: 9780816683055ISBN 10: 0816683050 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 01 March 2014 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of Contents"Contents Introduction: Challenging the Official Story of Korean Adoption1. Militarized Humanitarianism: Rethinking the Emergence of Korean Adoption2. Gender and the Militaristic Gaze3. Marketing the Social Orphan4. Normalizing the Adopted Child5. ""I Want My Head to Be Removed"": The Limits of NormativityEpilogue: Tracing Other Genealogies of Korean Adoption AcknowledgmentsNotesIndex"Reviews""Complicating existing studies on Korean adoption and Cold War militarism, From Orphan to Adoptee shows how practices of transnational adoption required first the production of the ‘orphan’ as an available commodity open to transfer. ‘Orphans’ need not be parentless at all. By demonstrating that ‘orphans’ were made through various forms of militarized humanitarianism in the years leading up to the Korean War, Pate offers us a counter-history that profoundly changes our understandings of the relationship between U.S. empire and adoption. An original and exciting book."" —Mark C. Jerng, University of California, Davis ""Pate’s work is wide-ranging, highly compelling and certainly an incisive addition to American studies, transnational studies, and orphan/adoptee studies.""—Asian American Literature Fans ""Pate enlarges the critical lens on international adoption and U.S.-South Korean relations.""—Diplomatic History Pate's work is wide-ranging, highly compelling and certainly an incisive addition to American studies, transnational studies, and orphan/adoptee studies. -Asian American Literature Fans Pate enlarges the critical lens on international adoption and U.S.-South Korean relations. -Diplomatic History Complicating existing studies on Korean adoption and Cold War militarism, From Orphan to Adoptee shows how practices of transnational adoption required first the production of the 'orphan' as an available commodity open to transfer. 'Orphans' need not be parentless at all. By demonstrating that 'orphans' were made through various forms of militarized humanitarianism in the years leading up to the Korean War, Pate offers us a counter-history that profoundly changes our understandings of the relationship between U.S. empire and adoption. An original and exciting book. -Mark C. Jerng, University of California, Davis Pate's work is wide-ranging, highly compelling and certainly an incisive addition to American studies, transnational studies, and orphan/adoptee studies. --Asian American Literature Fans Pate enlarges the critical lens on international adoption and U.S.-South Korean relations. --Diplomatic History Complicating existing studies on Korean adoption and Cold War militarism, From Orphan to Adoptee shows how practices of transnational adoption required first the production of the 'orphan' as an available commodity open to transfer. 'Orphans' need not be parentless at all. By demonstrating that 'orphans' were made through various forms of militarized humanitarianism in the years leading up to the Korean War, Pate offers us a counter-history that profoundly changes our understandings of the relationship between U.S. empire and adoption. An original and exciting book. --Mark C. Jerng, University of California, Davis Pate's work is wide-ranging, highly compelling and certainly an incisive addition to American studies, transnational studies, and orphan/adoptee studies. --Asian American Literature Fans Pate enlarges the critical lens on international adoption and U.S.-South Korean relations. --Diplomatic History Complicating existing studies on Korean adoption and Cold War militarism, From Orphan to Adoptee shows how practices of transnational adoption required first the production of the 'orphan' as an available commodity open to transfer. 'Orphans' need not be parentless at all. By demonstrating that 'orphans' were made through various forms of militarized humanitarianism in the years leading up to the Korean War, Pate offers us a counter-history that profoundly changes our understandings of the relationship between U.S. empire and adoption. An original and exciting book. --Mark C. Jerng, University of California, Davis Author InformationSooJin Pate is visiting assistant professor at Macalester College, where she teaches critical race theory, immigration, and postcolonial approaches to the study of U.S. history and culture. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |