Making Gaybies: Queer Reproduction and Multiracial Feeling
Author(s): Jaya Keaney
LGBTIQ+ Parents | LGBTI & Queer Studies | Australian/Aotearoa
In Making Gaybies Jaya Keaney explores queer family making as a site of racialized intimacy. Drawing on interviews with queer families in Australia, Keaney traces the lived experiences of choice and constraint as these families seek to craft likeness with their future children and tell stories of chosen family made through love. Queer family building often involves multiracial and multicultural encounters, as intending parents take part in the global fertility industry. Keaney follows queer family making through reproductive technologies and highlights the confines of varied transnational reproductive markets and policies, and changing formations of race, gender, sexuality, and kinship. Whether sharing the story of white gay men choosing Indian and Thai egg donors to make their surrogate-born children's ethnicity visually distinct from their own or that of an Aboriginal lesbian and her white partner choosing a Cherokee donor from the United States to articulate a global Indigeneity, Keaney foregrounds the entwinement of reproduction, race, and affect. By focusing on queer family making, Keaney demonstrates how reproduction fosters a queer multiracial imaginary of kinship.
November 2023
Product Information
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Origin Stories 1
1. Assembling Queer Fertility 31
2. Making Do 45
3. Crafting Likeness 72
4. Racializing Wombs 110
5. Love Makes a Family? 141
Conclusion: Manifest Care 169
Notes 181
Bibliography 199
Index 219
General Fields
- :
- : Duke University Press
- : Duke University Press
- : 01 November 2023
- : 01 November 2023
- : books
Special Fields
- : Jaya Keaney