Adoption & Culture: A discussion of adoptee-othering (and various ‘monsters’) in Literature and Law (Reform)
LawPod24 Feb 2022

Adoption & Culture: A discussion of adoptee-othering (and various ‘monsters’) in Literature and Law (Reform)

​Discussion of adoptee 'othering' in literature and law: personal accounts, Frankenstein's creature, and Ireland's latest attempt at enabling access to birth records. Alice Diver (Lecturer, School of Law, QUB) in conversation with Professor Emily Hipchen (Editor of Adoption & Culture (adoptionandculture.org), Director of Nonfiction Writing, Senior Lecturer in English, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island ) about some of the themes underpinning her recent publication, “Monstrous Othering”: The Gothic Nature of Origin-Tracing in Law and Literature" (November, 2021). The session opens with a brief discussion of their own respective experiences as 'mother and baby home' adoptees in the U.S. and Canada in the 1960's, before turning to an analysis of how the particular adoptee brand of 'fearful otherness' is often represented -and indeed perpetuated - in certain works of fiction e.g. Shelley's 'Frankenstein,' Emily Bronte's 'Wuthering Heights', and Ishiguro's 'Never Let Me Go.' In respect of achieving meaningful reform to law and policy, language is key. Ireland's controversial Birth Information and Tracing Bill 2022 - currently being debated - has similarly served to highlight how certain lingering biases of mistrust still attach to the adoptees' need to search for origins and (potentially uncomfortable) familial truths. Discriminatory barriers to accessing one's own information - and to achieving some form of contact with genetic relatives - still exist: the use of labels also continues to matter, as the recent controversy over the use of the term 'birth mother' within the legislation (since amended to 'mother') also evidenced. Links: Insta @adoptionandculture https://ohiostatepress.org/AdoptionCulture.html @emilyhipchen link to book: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-319-01071-7

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(250)

Humanitarian Forensics and the Disappeared: Oran Finegan on Dignity, Trust, and Accountability

Humanitarian Forensics and the Disappeared: Oran Finegan on Dignity, Trust, and Accountability

LawPod host Dr Lauren Dempster speaks with Oran Finegan, director of Forensic Action International, about his 25+ years as a forensic specialist in humanitarian and human rights work across 50+ global...

25 Juni 32min

From Copyright Infringement to Superintelligence: The Legal and Philosophical Future of AI

From Copyright Infringement to Superintelligence: The Legal and Philosophical Future of AI

What happens when the law meets a general-purpose cultural machine? In this episode, hosts Matteo Iuorio and Sofia Debernardi sit down with intellectual property expert Professor Giancarlo Frosio to ...

20 Maj 50min

Punishment, Politics, and Legal Plunder: Joshua Page on the Long Struggle Over Criminal Justice

Punishment, Politics, and Legal Plunder: Joshua Page on the Long Struggle Over Criminal Justice

In this episode of LawPod, Dr Alessandro Corda is joined by Professor Joshua Page (University of Minnesota) for an in‑depth conversation tracing his intellectual journey through the sociology of punis...

14 Maj 36min

The Duty to Assist: Law, Risk and Responsibility

The Duty to Assist: Law, Risk and Responsibility

What does the law expect us to do when another person is in immediate danger? And what happens when someone steps in to help — but is injured in the process? In this episode of LawPod, Dr Rosie Cowan...

7 Maj 27min

Digital Investigations Lab (Part 2)

Digital Investigations Lab (Part 2)

Learning, Trauma, and Truth: A Student Perspective on Digital Investigations What does it mean to learn law by documenting real harm in real time? In Part 2 of this two‑episode LawPod series, host E...

23 Apr 25min

Digital Investigations Lab (Part 1)

Digital Investigations Lab (Part 1)

Open Source Investigations, AI, and Accountability in Conflict What happens when war crimes are filmed in real time — but truth itself becomes contested? In this episode of LawPod, host Eva Richards...

16 Apr 37min

Adoptee Rights and Access to Records in Northern Ireland (Part II)

Adoptee Rights and Access to Records in Northern Ireland (Part II)

Dr Alice Diver hosts a follow‑up LawPod conversation with Sharon, Maeve, and Brigid from Adopt NI, continuing the discussion on adoptee rights, truth recovery, and Northern Ireland’s forthcoming redre...

26 Mars 36min

Inside QUB Law’s Student Skills Assistants Programme

Inside QUB Law’s Student Skills Assistants Programme

Dr Nora Burns speaks with PhD students and long-serving Student Skills Assistants (SSAs) Seanin Little and Aislinn Fanning about the Student Skills Assistants Programme at Queen's University Belfast L...

19 Mars 32min

Populärt inom Utbildning

rss-bara-en-till-om-missbruk-medberoende-2
historiepodden-se
det-skaver
harrisons-dramatiska-historia
nu-blir-det-historia
sektledare
not-fanny-anymore
roda-vita-rosen
rss-viktmedicinpodden
allt-du-velat-veta
johannes-hansen-podcast
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
rss-ar-det-rimligt
rss-max-tant-med-max-villman
rss-basta-livet
rss-mina-andetag
sex-pa-riktigt-med-marika-smith
sa-in-i-sjalen
rss-traningsklubben
rss-foraldramotet-bring-lagercrantz