Meeting Once More: The Korean Side of Transnational Adoption
Elise M. Prébin
Abstract
A great mobilization began in South Korea in the 1990s: adult transnational adoptees began to return to their birth country and meet for the first time with their birth parents—sometimes in televised encounters which garnered high ratings. What makes the case of South Korea remarkable is the sheer scale of the activity that has taken place around the adult adoptees' return, and by extension the national significance that has been accorded to these family meetings. Informed by the author's own experience as an adoptee and two years of ethnographic research in Seoul, as well as an analysis of th ... More
A great mobilization began in South Korea in the 1990s: adult transnational adoptees began to return to their birth country and meet for the first time with their birth parents—sometimes in televised encounters which garnered high ratings. What makes the case of South Korea remarkable is the sheer scale of the activity that has taken place around the adult adoptees' return, and by extension the national significance that has been accorded to these family meetings. Informed by the author's own experience as an adoptee and two years of ethnographic research in Seoul, as well as an analysis of the popular television program “I Want to See This Person Again,” which reunites families, this book sheds light on an understudied aspect of transnational adoption: the impact of transnational adoptees on their birth country, and especially on their birth families. The book offers a complex and fascinating contribution to the study of new kinship models, migration, and the anthropology of media, as well as to the study of South Korea.
Keywords:
transnational adoption,
family meetings,
television program,
birth parents,
transnational adoptees,
birth families,
kinship,
migration,
South Korea,
media
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2013 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780814760260 |
Published to NYU Press Scholarship Online: March 2016 |
DOI:10.18574/nyu/9780814760260.001.0001 |