Damien W. Riggs is Associate Professor in social work at Flinders University, Australia and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow. He is the author of almost 200 publications in the fields of gender and sexuality, family, and mental health, in addition to working as a Lacanian psychotherapist in private practice where he specializes in working with transgender young people.
Elizabeth Peel is a Professor of Communication and Social Interaction in the Department of Social Sciences at Loughborough University, UK and a British Academy Mid-Career Fellow. She is author of over 100 publications in critical social psychology, sexuality and health. She is an Associate Fellow of the BPS and Chair of its Psychology of Sexualities Section.
“Riggs and Peel provide an excellent introduction and nuanced analysis of how kinship operates as ‘a technology’. They provide an engaging critique of naturalization processes and the ways these underpin social structures and situate ‘the human’ centre stage in the kinship saga. The authors successfully use their critical posthumanist vantage point to unpick power, kinship and the ‘natural order of things’. Critical Kinship Studies is thus invaluable reading for students and researchers interested in how lives and loves become solidified in complex webs of relating.” (Professor Jacqui Gabb, Professor of Sociology and Intimacy, The Open University, UK)
“Insightful and comprehensive, this book is a well-written and timely contribution to understanding the ’critical’ in critical kinship studies. Damien W. Riggs and Elizabeth Peel use a diverse mix of empirical material to persuasively and eloquently illustrate how practices of kinship naturalizations operate in various institutional and cross species contexts.” (Professor Charlotte Kroløkke, Department for the Study of Culture, University of Southern Denmark)
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Om bidragsyterne
Damien W. Riggs is Associate Professor in social work at Flinders University, Australia and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow. He is the author of almost 200 publications in the fields of gender and sexuality, family, and mental health, in addition to working as a Lacanian psychotherapist in private practice where he specializes in working with transgender young people.Elizabeth Peel is a Professor of Communication and Social Interaction in the Department of Social Sciences at Loughborough University, UK and a British Academy Mid-Career Fellow. She is author of over 100 publications in critical social psychology, sexuality and health. She is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society and Chair of its Psychology of Sexualities Section.