ABSTRACT This essay analyzes how traditional notions of family are “queered” in contemporary memoir. I explore how heterosexual coupling becomes unnatural, undermining its equation with reproduction—and even the predictable forward… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT This essay analyzes how traditional notions of family are “queered” in contemporary memoir. I explore how heterosexual coupling becomes unnatural, undermining its equation with reproduction—and even the predictable forward march of family time becomes circular, haunted by alternate kinship models. I refer to this dynamic as “akin to kin” to consider how these representations both approximate and depart from normative ideas of family. I analyze several contemporary family memoirs to tease out moments in which “family” is imagined otherwise through queer relationalities.
               
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