What does it mean to be a kinsman? What kind of relationships are categorized as kinship? Moving beyond a narrow definition implying that kinship is just blood and legal bonds, we fall in the grey area in which borders between kinship, friendship, co-residence relations, foster care, other mothering, godparenting are blurred. Like Family: Narratives of Fictive Kinship by Margaret K. Nelson provides an intriguing account of these porous borders and focuses on “bond[s] between two or more people who are not related by blood, adoption or marriage but who, for at least some period, apply the family idiom to their understanding of at least some aspects of their relationships” (97). Rather than answering the question of whether or not it is real kinship, Margaret K. Nelson brings to the fore motivations, practices, expectations, and dynamics of like-family relations, the language of family, similarities and differences among these various types of relations, and deep reflections on limits of these relations by participants. Through discussing individual cases of 75 white middle-class Americans aged between 20 and 80 years, the book explores three ideal types of like-family relations: “host family/guest teen” relations, “informal parents/unofficial children” relations, and like-sibling relations. The “host family/guest teenager” relationship arises in the context of a temporary co-residence of teenagers who have their own family but lives with a family that is not their own which provides care for a teenager for this period. The reasons for such relationships can be diverse: student exchange programs, need for respite due to poor relations in natal family, or an unwillingness to change schools and break off relations with friends in a situation when parents move to another state. Co-residence is crucial for this type of like-family relations because teens are actively involved in family practices such as shared dinners and “stupid everyday stuff” that “transform [teens] into insiders” (78). Another important point is the limited period during which the teen is like a tourist, until they are temporary incorporated into host family, acquire a new family experience, and then return to their family. This experience doesn’t change their kinship identity, and the border between the natal and host family is preserved. In contrast, the “informal parents/unofficial children” is long-lasting relationships. Caused by serious issues in the natal family, these relationships involve a moving and gradual distancing of children from their natal family and inclusion in a new family. In some cases, this leads to the blurring of the boundaries between the family and the like-family and may even result in the legitimization of kinship through adoption. In other cases, the uncertain status of the relationships —“Who am I for these people? Who are they for me?”— remains with that person forever. The issue of namelessness and lack of clear classification becomes more noticeable here than in the previous type of relationships. Whereas previous forms refer to hierarchical and unequal intergenerational relations, like-sibling bonds imply long-lasting equal relationships between adult peers. They are the most uncertain relationships of all the other types, because they fall into the gap between friendship, sibling relationships, and romantic relationships, taking some parts from each relationship, but not being fully any of them. Unlike in a romantic relationship, there is no sex, nor are there role expectations as in a friendship, whereas ability to choose with whom to forge relationships is underscored as compared to kinship. Kinship and friendship based on normative expectations and past baggage contrasts with like-sibling bonds inspired by unconditional love and personal knowledge: “I can trust my brother because he’s obligated in some way because he’s my brother, whereas I can trust Ruth …
Nelson, Margaret K. Like Family: Narratives of Fictive Kinship. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2020, 244 pages[Record]
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Irina Kretser
St. Petersburg State University