‘To raise a village, fall far from the tree’: methods for queer kinship pasts, presents and futures
‘To raise a village, fall far from the tree’: methods for queer kinship pasts, presents and futures
How can we understand queer kinship as it is experienced in the present, without inadvertently fixing its meaning, ignoring the (in)flexibility of memory, or failing to capture its continued evolution? We argue that through recognition of the affective stickiness of family and kinship characterized variously by pain, joy, tradition, contrariness, and connection, we can find routes to collectively imagine queer futures. Based on an ongoing collaboration between a sociologist and an artist, this paper considers what a queer approach to collating experiences of kinship may produce. We recount our experiments in curating methods that allow us to narrate our (queer) relationship to kinship with acknowledgement of the fragments of diverse pasts, embodied presents, and wished for futures. We offer examples of methods that celebrate randomness and interruption, and curate ongoing disruption to linear inheritances and transmission of meaning. We show how these methods can offer opportunities to recursively deconstruct and reconstruct our personal and shared histories, creating unfinished, chaotic, glitchy, and always-becoming stories of queer kinship.
Reed, Lizzie
06fc34da-5626-478a-9c54-327cf6e82f50
Stella, Milou
c316700f-1041-4933-a179-a4da552e932e
Reed, Lizzie
06fc34da-5626-478a-9c54-327cf6e82f50
Stella, Milou
c316700f-1041-4933-a179-a4da552e932e
Reed, Lizzie and Stella, Milou
(2024)
‘To raise a village, fall far from the tree’: methods for queer kinship pasts, presents and futures.
Sexualities.
(doi:10.1177/13634607241293933).
Abstract
How can we understand queer kinship as it is experienced in the present, without inadvertently fixing its meaning, ignoring the (in)flexibility of memory, or failing to capture its continued evolution? We argue that through recognition of the affective stickiness of family and kinship characterized variously by pain, joy, tradition, contrariness, and connection, we can find routes to collectively imagine queer futures. Based on an ongoing collaboration between a sociologist and an artist, this paper considers what a queer approach to collating experiences of kinship may produce. We recount our experiments in curating methods that allow us to narrate our (queer) relationship to kinship with acknowledgement of the fragments of diverse pasts, embodied presents, and wished for futures. We offer examples of methods that celebrate randomness and interruption, and curate ongoing disruption to linear inheritances and transmission of meaning. We show how these methods can offer opportunities to recursively deconstruct and reconstruct our personal and shared histories, creating unfinished, chaotic, glitchy, and always-becoming stories of queer kinship.
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Oct 2024 Accepted version Reed Stella Revised Final Manuscript Queer Frontiers Special Issue for PURE
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reed-stella-2024-to-raise-a-village-fall-far-from-the-tree-methods-for-queer-kinship-pasts-presents-and-futures
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Submitted date: 20 June 2024
Accepted/In Press date: 8 October 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 October 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 494452
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494452
ISSN: 1363-4607
PURE UUID: 90750f8c-aabd-46ef-b227-f144310d7b6e
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Date deposited: 08 Oct 2024 16:47
Last modified: 22 Oct 2024 01:57
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Author:
Milou Stella
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