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Gay and Lesbian Parenting

New Directions

Fiona Tasker Jerry J. Bigner Fiona Tasker Jerry J. Bigner

$284

Hardback

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English
Routledge
14 April 2008
A new, multidisciplinary look at GLBT parenting

Over the past 30 years, research on gay and lesbian parents has produced findings that challenge deeply rooted beliefs in child psychology about the processes through which parents influence the development of their children. Gay and Lesbian Parenting: New Directions builds on this important research with a detailed multidisciplinary examination of established knowledge and emerging information. In addition to evaluating already substantiated findings, this innovative collection marks a turning point in the field by showcasing a new wave of research that examines the dynamics of same-sex parenting and addresses questions about newly emerging concerns such as the consequences of different routes to same-sex parenthood and the effects of social perceptions on gay and lesbian family life.

Gay and Lesbian Parenting: New Directions presents an overview of significant developments and suggests future directions for the field. Arranged in four sections, this unique text offers cutting-edge information gathered from both quantitative and qualitative research methods. Section one considers gay and lesbian family formation and the may routes through which lesbians and gay men have become parents. Section two reviews family relationships from parents', and their children's, perspective. The contributions to the third section discuss how gay and lesbian families describe themselves to others. The final section examines the public perceptions held by heterosexuals about lesbian and gay parenting and looks toward possibilities for the future.

Chapters in Gay and Lesbian Parenting: New Directions:

look at established research and the perspective of gay and lesbian parents and their children on family life

explore methodological advances in the research field

define the demographics of gay and lesbian parenting and the comparisons of lesbians, gay men, heterosexual women, and heterosexual men without children

consider the decisions involved in and the systemic process of donor insemination and surrogacy

study gay and lesbian adoptive parents

investigate representations of diversity in storybooks for children of gay and lesbian parents

situate gay men’s journeys into fatherhood within the sociohistorical context of developments in the United States

tell personal stories about the prospect of gay fatherhood

present a consideration of the different identities that lesbian and heterosexual mothers construct

critically consider the terminology used both within and outside lesbian-parented families to describe a wide variety of co-parenting relationships

give an introduction to critical psychology and deconstruct the debate over the importance of paternal influence

report findings from a large community survey in Australia on attitudes toward same-sex parenting and beliefs about developmental outcomes

and much more!

Accessible and detailed, with numerous case studies, bibliographies, tables, and figures, Gay and Lesbian Parenting: New Directions is an ideal resource for students and educators, researchers and professionals working in GLBT and Queer Studies, family therapists, counselors, psychotherapists, social workers, and psychiatrists.
By:   ,
Edited by:   ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   1.130kg
ISBN:   9780789031068
ISBN 10:   078903106X
Pages:   524
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Primary ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Fiona Tasker, PhD, Jerry J. Bigner, PhD

Reviews for Gay and Lesbian Parenting: New Directions

Beijing Time is an exhaustive, modern portrayal of a city and its people, written with flair from the belly of the Beijing dragon. As China scrubs away the history of the Cultural Revolution and repaints the city in capitalist strokes, old Beijing is being replaced by a more tourism-oriented version...This is a vividly textured account of a city in transition. -- Laurence Mackin Irish Times 20080614 Beijing Time is a wide-ranging travelogue that succeeds in capturing the contradictions of what the authors call a monstropolis. They eschew simplification in favor of Beijing's dazzling intricacy...We are shown a city with astonishing human capital, a city where, barely a decade after Tiananmen, the people and the government appear to have reached some tentative concord between dissent and coercion. -- Tod Hoffman Montreal Gazette 20080802 This engrossing book merges travel writing, sociology and streetwise reportage. From Mao's tomb to designer malls, karaoke bars to Pandaman, who parodies Olympic hype, these intellectual sleuths search for clues to the hidden city beneath the headline stories. Their Beijing hums with ghosts of the past, as well as with every kind of futuristic dream. -- Justin Wintle The Independent 20080808 Beijing Time is an intriguing puzzle portrait of pieces of China, from an explication of how Communist construction disrupted the traditional flow of qi through the city to scenes from ragpickers' slums, karaoke bars, ghost markets where collectors search for authentic Maoist ephemera, former factories converted to avant-garde artists' spaces, and a good deal more in only 238 well-illustrated pages. Through it all, China emerges as something quite different from the totalitarian nightmare of some people's fears, something more like the European monarchies of the 19th century where arts, culture and independent thinking flourished alongside the activities of secret police--not a free society in the American sense, necessarily, but one where plenty of people seem to be free just the same, and maybe more free, for the risks they might run, than Americans would give them credit for. -- Samuel Wilson think3institute.blogspot.com 20080617 The book starts with Beijing places, beginning of course at the centre of the Chinese universe, Tiananmen Square, and starts to unpack their meanings for people today. It is interspersed with long encounters with interesting, ordinary Beijingers: a policewoman, rubbish sifters, a seedy businessman working contacts in a karaoke joint. -- Rowan Callick The Australian 20080806 A fascinating cultural mapping of modern Beijing. Here are ring roads that resemble successive reworkings of the old city wall ; here is the district for saw-gash CDs (imperfect discs dumped by western record labels on the Chinese market), where the young bob for Sex Pistols albums...The book is a useful street-level corrective to received ideas. In particular, its interviews with citizens--an ex-policeman, scavengers in plastic-bag mountains, luminaries of the art scene, cafe owners who dream of being film directors, members of a kind of granny Neighborhood Watch scheme--are wonderfully humane. -- Steven Poole The Guardian 20080906


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