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"Rooted in historical, site-based, narrative, and political
accounts, Full Surrogacy Now is the seriously radical cry for full
gestational justice that I long for. This kind of gestation depends
on realizing the implications of knowing that we all actually,
materially, make one another, and that this labor continues to be
exploited, extracted, and alienated-unequally-at every turn in
Capitalism and Patriarchy. Full of brilliant, generative, and also
shamelessly biting critique of both bourgeois and communist tracts,
feminist and otherwise, Lewis's voice is unique and bracing. I need
it; it fills my whole self with reimagined possibilities for making
oddkin who are not property. Lewis set out to write an immoderate,
utopian, partisan, anti-authoritarian communist defense of
surrogates and surrogacy in ramifying registers of meanings and
practices, and she has succeeded. Lewis asks the necessary
questions, 'Can we parent politically, hopefully,
nonreproductively-in a comradely way?' Can we become full
surrogates for and with each other? In a book full of fierce
demystifications and sharp dissections of injustice masquerading as
humanitarianism, nonetheless Lewis convincingly and radically
affirms: 'Everywhere about me, I can see beautiful militants
hell-bent on regeneration, not self-replication.'" - Donna Haraway
What if we could do better than the family? We need to talk about
the family. For those who are lucky, families can be filled with
love and care, but for many they are sites of pain: from
abandonment and neglect, to abuse and violence. Nobody is more
likely to harm you than your family. Even in so-called happy
families, the unpaid, unacknowledged work that it takes to raise
children and care for each other is endless and exhausting. It
could be otherwise: in this urgent, incisive polemic, leading
feminist critic Sophie Lewis makes the case for family abolition.
Abolish the Family traces the history of family abolitionist
demands, beginning with nineteenth century utopian socialist and
sex radical Charles Fourier, the Communist Manifesto and
early-twentieth century Russian family abolitionist Alexandra
Kollontai. Turning her attention to the 1960s, Lewis reminds us of
the anti-family politics of radical feminists like Shulamith
Firestone and the gay liberationists, a tradition she traces to the
queer marxists bringing family abolition to the twenty-first
century. This exhilarating essay looks at historic rightwing panic
about Black families and the violent imposition of the family on
indigenous communities, and insists: only by thinking beyond the
family can we begin to imagine what might come after.
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