Abstract

abstract: In this conversation, Emily Hipchen speaks with Dr. Alice Diver (School of Law, QUB, N. Ireland) about some of the themes underpinning her publication, "'Monstrous Othering': The Gothic Nature of Origin-Tracing in Law and Literature" (November 2021). The conversation opens with a brief discussion of their own respective experiences as "mother and baby home" adoptees in the US and Canada in the 1960s before turning to an analysis of how the particular adoptee brand of "fearful otherness" is often represented—and indeed perpetuated—in certain works of "monstrous orphan" fiction. In respect of achieving meaningful sociolegal and cultural reforms, language is key. The debates surrounding the wording of Ireland's controversial Birth Information and Tracing Act (2022) highlighted how lingering prejudices still attach to the topic of adoption and to the need to find one's origins. Discriminatory barriers to access—and contact with genetic relatives—still exist: the use of labels matters, too, as the controversy over the use of the term "birth mother" within the legislation (since amended to "mother") also evidenced. Though mainly relevant to adoptee rights, and adoption law and policy, debates and discourse on language may also impact on other areas where losses of origins occur, such as surrogacy and international adoption.

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