Recomposing kinship

What would happen if we accepted technological connection as a form of reckoning kinship? In exploring this position, I draw on accounts of disability and illness. First, I focus on an account of fecal microbial transplant use and the intimate connections the technology creates between the recipient...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFeminist anthropology (Hoboken, N.J.) Vol. 1; no. 2; pp. 231 - 247
Main Author Wolf‐Meyer, Matthew
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.11.2020
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:What would happen if we accepted technological connection as a form of reckoning kinship? In exploring this position, I draw on accounts of disability and illness. First, I focus on an account of fecal microbial transplant use and the intimate connections the technology creates between the recipient and donor. This is followed with the case of a woman who relies upon facilitated communication to communicate with her social others, which depends on her use of other persons to interact with a keyboard. In both cases, material connections with and through technology disrupt the putative nature of kinship as based in “custom” and “blood.” Taking technological mediation in the production of kinship networks seriously destabilizes humanist conceptions of the contours and capacities of bodies, eroding the distinction between self and world. In apprizing the role of technology in making kinship networks, attention to disability and illness experiences of the world point to ways out of dominant conceptions of the human and the need to ethnographically attend to nonnormative bodily engagements with material worlds as the basis for emergent forms of personhood and subjectivity.
ISSN:2643-7961
2643-7961
DOI:10.1002/fea2.12018