Abstract

Book synopsis: Whilst politics of reproduction have been at heart of feminist struggles for over a century and a half, their analysis has not yet come to occupy a central place in interdisciplinary study of citizenship. This volume takes up challenge posed by Bryan Turner, when he noted the absence of any systematic thinking about familial relations, reproduction and (2008), and offers first major global collection of work exploring this nexus of practices and political contestations. The book brings together scholars from across Europe, Americas, and Australia to develop feminist and queer analyses of relationship between and reproduction, and to explore ways in which is reproduced. Extending foundational work of feminist political theorists and sociologists who have interrogated public/private dichotomy on which traditional civic republican and liberal understandings of rest, contributors examine biological, sexual, and technological realities of natality, and social realities of intimate intergenerational material and affective labour that are generative of citizens, and that serve to reproduce membership of, and belonging to, states, nations, societies, and thus of citizenship itself. This book was published as a special issue of Citizenship Studies.

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