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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: SunAh M LaybournPublisher: New York University Press Imprint: New York University Press ISBN: 9781479814770ISBN 10: 1479814776 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 15 January 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsSunAh M Laybourn tells a compelling story of the complex association between race, kinship, and citizenship among Korean American adoptees. By analyzing original survey data, in-depth interviews with adult adoptees, and films, she traces their transition to adulthood. Most adoptees were socialized as white via kinship ties and identified as white during some period of their lives. Dating was a pivotal reminder that they were non-white. This book would be terrific for any undergraduate course on the sociology of race, the family, and Asian Americans. -- Grace Kao, co-author of Diversity and the Transition to Adulthood in America SunAh M Laybourn's pivotal work introduces readers to the idea of exceptional belonging - the granted but precarious inclusion experienced by many Korean individuals adopted into White families in the US Her study provides a powerful framework with which to examine this type of belonging, outlining both the privileges and perils associated with White intimacies and describing how adoptees perpetuate, negotiate, and challenge such arrangements. A must-read for practitioners and scholars of race, citizenship, identity, and kinship. -- Carla Goar, Professor of Sociology at Kent State University Engaging written and impeccably researched, Out of Place offers an innovative analysis of how Korean American adoptees challenge widespread beliefs about kinship, citizenship, and race in America. -- Patricia Hill Collins, author of Intersectionality as Critical Social Theory SunAh M Laybourn's Out of Place is magnificent. It is a meticulous study of Korean transnational, transracial adoptees' particularities that unravels conflicting claims on identity and family while providing theoretical insight into the nature of belonging. Laybourn carefully chronicles a continuum of racialized national inclusion-from adoptable Korean orphans to easily deportable adults-whose citizenship remains contingent and revocable according to state whims. -- Victor Ray, author of On Critical Race Theory """SunAh M Laybourn tells a compelling story of the complex association between race, kinship, and citizenship among Korean American adoptees. By analyzing original survey data, in-depth interviews with adult adoptees, and films, she traces their transition to adulthood. Most adoptees were socialized as white via kinship ties and identified as white during some period of their lives. Dating was a pivotal reminder that they were non-white. This book would be terrific for any undergraduate course on the sociology of race, the family, and Asian Americans."" * Grace Kao, co-author of Diversity and the Transition to Adulthood in America * ""Engaging written and impeccably researched, Out of Place offers an innovative analysis of how Korean American adoptees challenge widespread beliefs about kinship, citizenship, and race in America."" * Patricia Hill Collins, author of Intersectionality as Critical Social Theory * ""SunAh M Laybourn’s pivotal work introduces readers to the idea of exceptional belonging – the granted but precarious inclusion experienced by many Korean individuals adopted into White families in the US Her study provides a powerful framework with which to examine this type of belonging, outlining both the privileges and perils associated with White intimacies and describing how adoptees perpetuate, negotiate, and challenge such arrangements. A must-read for practitioners and scholars of race, citizenship, identity, and kinship."" * Carla Goar, Professor of Sociology at Kent State University * ""SunAh M Laybourn's Out of Place is magnificent. It is a meticulous study of Korean transnational, transracial adoptees' particularities that unravels conflicting claims on identity and family while providing theoretical insight into the nature of belonging. Laybourn carefully chronicles a continuum of racialized national inclusion–from adoptable Korean orphans to easily deportable adults–whose citizenship remains contingent and revocable according to state whims."" * Victor Ray, author of On Critical Race Theory *" """SunAh M Laybourn tells a compelling story of the complex association between race, kinship, and citizenship among Korean American adoptees. By analyzing original survey data, in-depth interviews with adult adoptees, and films, she traces their transition to adulthood. Most adoptees were socialized as white via kinship ties and identified as white during some period of their lives. Dating was a pivotal reminder that they were non-white. This book would be terrific for any undergraduate course on the sociology of race, the family, and Asian Americans.""-- ""Grace Kao, co-author of Diversity and the Transition to Adulthood in America"" ""SunAh M Laybourn's pivotal work introduces readers to the idea of exceptional belonging - the granted but precarious inclusion experienced by many Korean individuals adopted into White families in the US Her study provides a powerful framework with which to examine this type of belonging, outlining both the privileges and perils associated with White intimacies and describing how adoptees perpetuate, negotiate, and challenge such arrangements. A must-read for practitioners and scholars of race, citizenship, identity, and kinship.""-- ""Carla Goar, Professor of Sociology at Kent State University"" ""Engaging written and impeccably researched, Out of Place offers an innovative analysis of how Korean American adoptees challenge widespread beliefs about kinship, citizenship, and race in America.""-- ""Patricia Hill Collins, author of Intersectionality as Critical Social Theory"" ""SunAh M Laybourn's Out of Place is magnificent. It is a meticulous study of Korean transnational, transracial adoptees' particularities that unravels conflicting claims on identity and family while providing theoretical insight into the nature of belonging. Laybourn carefully chronicles a continuum of racialized national inclusion-from adoptable Korean orphans to easily deportable adults-whose citizenship remains contingent and revocable according to state whims.""-- ""Victor Ray, author of On Critical Race Theory""" Author InformationSunAh M Laybourn is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Memphis. She is the co-author of Diversity in Black Greek Letter Organizations: Breaking the Line. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |