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Adopted Territory: Transnational Korean Adoptees and the Politics of Belonging, by Eleana J. Kim

Adopted Territory: Transnational Korean Adoptees and the Politics of Belonging, by Eleana J. Kim



Adopted Territory: Transnational Korean Adoptees and the Politics of Belonging, by Eleana J. Kim

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Adopted Territory: Transnational Korean Adoptees and the Politics of Belonging, by Eleana J. Kim

Since the end of the Korean War, an estimated 200,000 children from South Korea have been adopted into white families in North America, Europe, and Australia. While these transnational adoptions were initiated as an emergency measure to find homes for mixed-race children born in the aftermath of the war, the practice grew exponentially from the 1960s through the 1980s. At the height of South Korea’s “economic miracle,” adoption became an institutionalized way of dealing with poor and illegitimate children. Most of the adoptees were raised with little exposure to Koreans or other Korean adoptees, but as adults, through global flows of communication, media, and travel, they have come into increasing contact with each other, Korean culture, and the South Korean state. Since the 1990s, as Korean children have continued to leave to be adopted in the West, a growing number of adult adoptees have been returning to Korea to seek their cultural and biological origins. In this fascinating ethnography, Eleana J. Kim examines the history of Korean adoption, the emergence of a distinctive adoptee collective identity, and adoptee returns to Korea in relation to South Korean modernity and globalization. Kim draws on interviews with adult adoptees, social workers, NGO volunteers, adoptee activists, scholars, and journalists in the U.S., Europe, and South Korea, as well as on observations at international adoptee conferences, regional organization meetings, and government-sponsored motherland tours.

  • Sales Rank: #656793 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Duke University Press Books
  • Published on: 2010-11-30
  • Released on: 2010-11-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.25" h x .85" w x 6.13" l, 1.10 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 344 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Review
“Adopted Territory is the best and most thorough treatment of transnational adoption that I have seen. Eleana J. Kim provides sophisticated analyses of Korean overseas adoption to the United States, and South Korean history and state politics, within the contexts of cold war geopolitics and the rise of the American empire, while also attending to issues of nation, race, citizenship, gender, social class, and culture. The breadth, depth, and scope of Kim’s analyses contribute importantly to our understanding of the people and the phenomenon. Her well-contextualized and sensitive discussions of adoptee subjectivities are of particular interest.”—Elaine H. Kim, University of California, Berkeley

“This truly remarkable ethnography chronicles the birth and first generation of the global Korean adoptee movement. Adopted Territory brilliantly asserts that the movement is born of a powerful historical conjuncture among: the U.S.’s millennial culture of multiculturalism; South Korea’s aggressive globalization regimes and emergent democratic civil society; and adoptees coming of age. Adopted Territory offers also a sophisticated study of family, kinship, and nation through the challenging lens of adoption which Eleana J. Kim declares a veritable ‘catalyst for social transformation.’ A beautifully crafted multi-sited ethnography, Adopted Territory will no doubt enjoy a vibrant intellectual life.”—Nancy Abelmann, author of The Intimate University: Korean American Students and the Problems of Segregation

“By examining the dynamic history and relations among the concerned state�actors, international and domestic adoption agencies, adoptee advocacy groups, and individual adoptees and their self-governance groups, Kim expands existing scholarship within Korean studies on the geopolitics of intimacy . . . and neoliberal and developmentalist modernity. . . . Adopted Territory may be of particular interest to scholars in the fields of Korean studies, Asian and Asian American studies, and anthropology.” (EuyRyung Jun Journal of Asian Studies)

“Students and scholars of social and cultural anthropology, transnational identity and Korean and Asian American Studies will find Dr. Kim’s ethnography particularly informative. . . . Adopted Territory cogently argues the transformative potential of adoptee discourses on the inaccurate representations of adoptees as orphans and children, and the ideal family as a nuclear unit, and on challenging the state in social welfare provision. At the very least, for readers, it will re-shape conceptualizations of Korean identity and belonging.” (Ann H. Kim Ethnic and Racial Studies)

“Adopted Territory is truly a groundbreaking publication. It not only contributes to the new fields of Korean adoption studies, adoption cultural studies and critical adoption studies that have emerged lately, but also to the unfortunately still too territorialized fields of Asian studies and Korean studies, which still need to become transnationalized and not just include diasporic Asians and Koreans on the research agenda, but also embrace such previously discarded, forgotten and ‘non-authentic’ subjects as adoptees living in Western countries.” (Tobias H�binette Pacific Affairs)

“Adopted Territory, Eleana Kim’s powerful and innovative book about Korean transnational adoption, brings both intellectual rigor and a fresh approach to the study of adoptive kinship.” (Barbara Yngvesson American Ethnologist)

“The many strengths of Adopted Territory are solidified by Kim’s lucid and stylishly crafted prose. One is propelled through the book by a beautiful balance of detailed empirical accounts and judicious use of cultural�theory. . . . Kim’s work is an altogether new treatment of a number of themes known to transnational adoption scholars, defamiliarizing territory we thought we knew. At the same time, it will familiarize scholars from a number of other fields with the importance of adoptees’ stories and histories to transnational counterpublics.” (Sara Dorow Contemporary Sociology)

“Adopted Territory is a tour de force, masterfully traversing a complex transnational terrain that is at once overtly public involving multiple vested interests and competing agendas, and intensely personal and emotive.” (Jessica Walton Anthropological Forum)

From the Back Cover
"This truly remarkable ethnography chronicles the birth and first generation of the global Korean adoptee movement. "Adopted Territory" brilliantly asserts that the movement is born of a powerful historical conjuncture among: the U.S.'s millennial culture of multiculturalism; South Korea's aggressive globalization regimes and emergent democratic civil society; and adoptees coming of age. "Adopted Territory" offers also a sophisticated study of family, kinship, and nation through the challenging lens of adoption which Eleana J. Kim declares a veritable 'catalyst for social transformation.' A beautifully crafted multi-sited ethnography, "Adopted Territory" will no doubt enjoy a vibrant intellectual life."--Nancy Abelmann, author of "The Intimate University: Korean American Students and the Problems of Segregation"

About the Author

Eleana J. Kim is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Rochester.

Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
From War Orphans to First World Citizen
By Etienne RP
Recently Fleur Pellerin, a junior Cabinet member of the French government led by president Fran�ois Hollande, made her first visit to Korea. To the French, she is known as an elite public servant-turned-politician and put in charge of the digital economy and entrepreneurship portfolio, and also as the only minister with an Asian face. In Korea she is known as "one of us" or a "blood relative", and during her business trip to Seoul she was welcomed as if she was the homecoming queen. She had a chat with president Park Geun-hye, and featured in many television shows and media articles. Her first name, Fleur ("flower"), led to a crazed "Fleur-mania", and her Korean name, Kim Jong-suk, was also made public.

Like about 12 000 French citizen and 160 000 persons worldwide, Fleur Pellerin is a Korean adoptee. She left Korea when she was six months old, never met her biological parents again, and knows next to nothing about her birth country. For Koreans, she is the poor immigrant who made it abroad, and on top of that in a country known for its high culture and glamour - the conclusion of Korean TV dramas usually has the heartbroken heroin go to France to "refashion herself". But she also reminds Koreans of darker times, and of a phenomenon of transnational adoption that many feel awkward about. Not so long ago, the nation's pride in hosting the 1988 Summer Olympics was bruised by reports in the American press asserting that children constituted Korea's "largest export". Reaching out to adopted Koreans abroad, incorporating them in the community of overseas Koreans, and heralding their success was therefore a way for the Korean public to turn a sore spot into a matter of pride and celebration.

As Elena Kim reminds her readers in her ethnography of adopted Korean communities, Korean adoptees came to the West in distinct waves. First came the war orphans and mixed-blood children of US soldiers and Korean women. Then, in the 1960s and 1970s, American and West European families adopted the offsprings of single mothers or poor households who were convinced to relinquish their newborn baby in exchange of a hefty sum. Today, nearly all the children adopted overseas are infants born to unwed mothers in their late teens and early twenties. Meanwhile, the Koreans adopted in the past decades have become adults in their country of adoption, and today form a global community composed of subsets of regional and online groups with distinct histories and concerns. Internet and globalization have brought them together, and many are claiming voice and agency as a particular public with shared experience and common bonds.

The propinquity of money and children in transnational adoption and the attendant suspicion of human trafficking have made Korea's overseas adoption program a target of criticism throughout its history. It has been argued that orphanages (which were largely funded by Western relief organizations), and, later, state-subsidized adoption agencies, functioned as a surrogate welfare system and a conduit for foreign exchange. It has been further advanced that Korea's international adoption system not only retarded the development of domestic adoption and child welfare policies, but also provided a quick-fix solution that has been complicit in the social disenfranchisement of Korean women. Today South Korea has the lowest birth rate in the world, with fast increasing numbers of abortion and divorce. The "problem" of adoption (ibyang munje) has become a matter of public debate in which adult Korean adoptees and Korean birth mothers of an earlier period increasingly have a say.

What is unique about Korea's adoption program? First, conventional wisdom in South Korea and in the Western countries to which adoptees are sent blames the persistence of Confucian family values and preoccupations with patrilineal bloodlines for the reluctance among Koreans to adopt "their children". This is changing fast, with placement agencies now under the obligation to encourage domestic adoption first and famous media figures making a public gesture of adopting their own children. Second, the Korean state has so far failed to promote extended models of family arrangements, provide adequate financial support for single mothers, or tackle the problem of inadequate sex education. Adult adoptees such as Fleur Pellerin and lesser-known figures could help challenge dominant representations and policy outcomes, especially when they come from Europe, where the social security system is well developed and recomposed families are almost becoming the norm. Third, the long shadow of stigma associated with unwed motherhood in Korea is slowly eroding as Korean society enters a phase of globalized modernity.

But the most distinctive feature of Korea's adoption program is that it came first, and therefore became the template for subsequent programs. Korean adoptees represented a "social experiment", the outcomes of which were subject to intense scrutiny and debate since the practice began in the mid-1950s. Korean adoptions, determined to be largely successful by social workers and academic experts, expanded dramatically in the 1970s and paved the way for subsequent waves of adoptions of children from the developing world into white Western homes. By the 1970s, largely due to the success of the Korean model, transnational adoption became an institutionalized social welfare practice into many nations and a naturalized "choice" for individuals in the United States or in Europe. As Elena Kim notes, the adoption model is built upon the archetypal figure of the orphan who is construed as the ultimate figure of global humanitarianism, permitting Americans in particular to "save" children who are themselves often victims of American foreign policy decisions.

Not all adoptees were raised in wealthy, happy families with caring surrogate parents. Some experienced hardships and rejection by siblings and relatives; a significant number faced racism and bigotry at school or in their community; and most of them had to cope with the awkward feeling of being "yellow outside, white inside". Adoption is based on separation, and the traumatic scene of abandonment sometimes lingers. According to adoption specialists, loss and grief are inescapable aspects of the adoption experience for all members involved in an adoption. Adoptees and their relatives construct "what if" scenarios and "phantom lives" of what they would have become if they had stayed in Korea. Some adopted Koreans dream of a more authentic self in their birth country, while foster parents or agency workers sometimes construct cautionary tales about girls being forced into prostitution or reduced to a dehumanized treatment. For the most politically oriented adoptees, crafting a germane public discourse for discussing the politics of adoption is a difficult process. Typically, the adoptee can only feel gratitude and indebtedness for having been given "life" and "opportunity" through inclusion in the bourgeois nuclear family, and more complex feelings of ambivalence, mourning, or resentment are suppressed, condemned as ungrateful, or pathologized.

Faced with the taboos and emotionally charged issues that adoption raises, some adoptees simply choose to ignore their roots and go on with their lives. Others, increasingly, go on a quest for origins to discover the country of their birth and, for some of them, to try to meet with their biological parents. Since 2012, adopted Koreans can choose for double citizenship, or they can apply for a visa that allows them to live and work in Korea. But language and, sometimes, prejudices, remain a problem and put a barrier between them and the rest of the population. A social event known as The Gathering allows them to get together and share experience. Meeting other adoptees can feel like rediscovering one's lost tribe: "None of us had real peer groups growing up," notes one adoptee. "When we found each other, it was an electric thing." Self-exploration through shared storytelling is central to adoptee social practices and can be seen as a performative negotiation of self and world. The misadjustment or lack of fit with dominant national, ethnic, and cultural models forms the basis for creating a space where, as more than one adoptee has stated, "there's less explaining to do".

Adopted Territories is a work of cultural anthropology that comes loaded with theoretical concepts and abstract discussions. For Elena Kim, drawing on social theorists such as Judith Butler and Aihwa Ong, adoption blurs and unsettles the categories of race, nation, and family. Not unlike the forms of gay and lesbian kinship identified by queer theory, adoptees' experiences with nonnormative family forms lay the ground for alternative forms of personhood and kinship, contributing to the production of a shared global imaginary that has taken on transnational dimensions. "Adoptee kinship" is defined as "a form of solidarity based upon radical contingency rather than biologically rooted certitudes". From this perspective, kinship is not a preexisting truth that is discovered or found, but rather a set of relationships actively created out of social practice and cultural representation. It is a model of kinship that is not exclusive but additive, transnational, and expansive. "Public intimacy", another oxymoron, designates the potential sites of identification and association that extend beyond the biological family, thereby producing new kinds of identities and intimate relations.

The notion of "counterpublic", a term coined by Nancy Fraser in her critique of Habermas' model of the public sphere, "highlights the fact that the adoptee social imaginary exists in diacritical relation to dominant publics - whether in the United States, Europe, South Korea, or an increasingly transnational public sphere." The adoptee counterpublic is organized around a discursive process of identity construction in which adoptees endeavor to define themselves as a group that is distinct from others yet exists in relation to the wider public. By coining the notion of "contingent essentialism", the author points to the fact that "adoptee identity is at once essentialized as something natural and also construed as something cultural and socially constructed." Contingent essentialism is distinct from the biologism or genetic essentialism that characterizes much of the public discourse about adoptees and their "real" origins, identities, or families. Elena Kim defines "adopted territories" as "networks of adoptees and their activities, situated in a range of virtual and actual locations, that comprise the transnational Korean adoptee counterpublic."

Borrowed from Judith Butler, the notion of "constitutive outside" points to the legal fiction of the orphan that leaves behind an excess of relationship, which "enchains" the child givers and recipients and "haunts" adoptee subjectivities. "Adoption not only makes children into orphans, but, over time, also produces missing persons," writes Elena Kim, who illustrates her writing with artworks from internationally adopted artists. The book cover, a community artwork conceived by artist and activist Leanne Leith, features numbered tags bearing travel certificates delivered by the Republic of Korea, each tag representing one South Korean gone missing through international adoption. Much as the abstract conceptualizations, the live testimonies of adoptees and art pictures displayed in the book illustrate the potent message of longing and belonging that addresses a constitutive dimension of our shared humanity. Korean adoptees or not, "we all negotiate contingencies of personhood out of insufficient and mutable categories of the biological and the social."

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
The definitive book
By Mike
Tremendous book providing the history and roots of transnational Korean adoption, and why it isn't so simple to stop it. It is easy to read (for an academic book) and is wonderfully personal.

My favorite part of this book, and something i have not found in any other book on this subject, is that it provides details on behind the scenes organizing of adoptees themselves - how they came together to create an international movement to change korea's policies from the inside. A fascinating look at one of the earliest uses of social media and shared identity to transcend national and cultural backgrounds for social change on a huge scale. Provides a full view of perspectives, including how even various adoptees think differently about these issues.

This book is the definitive review and integration of the multitude of challenges, emotions, politics, and sensitivities involved in Korean adoption. We are lucky to have someone invest their life's time and effort, and produce such a coherent and complete work.

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