Lee Quinby
Frances Bartkowski's dazzling study of kinship in the contemporary era more than lives up to its provocative title. As with the bestiaries of the Middle Ages, which brought together stories of moral significance about the real and fanciful beasts of a divinely created universe, Bartkowski's bestiary brings together contemporary stories from popular culture, news media, literature, and social science and scientific studies, not only to highlight the arbitrary divisions of myriad kinship arrangements but also to point to crucial shifts that reimagine traditional moral systems.
Lee Quinby, Professor, Macaulay Honors College at CUNY, author of Millennial Seduction: A Skeptic Confronts Apocalyptic Culture
Judith Butler
Kissing Cousins is an extremely well-written effort to come to terms with new modes of kinship and new modes of imagining human community. The text makes a clear argument for the widening of those circles of sentient beings with whom humans have kinship. How broadly we conceive kinship has direct bearing on the conditions and limits of empathy and affiliation, and this has direct consequences for matters of love and war. Moving, singular, provocative, and pervasively intelligent, Kissing Cousins will appeal not only to academic readers in literary and cultural studies but also to an interdisciplinary range of readers in science and animal studies, anthropology, and film studies.
Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor in the Departments of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, University of California at Berkeley
Cary Wolfe
A wonderfully written, genuinely searching exploration of our new and myriad forms of intimacy and kinship'kintimacy,' to use the author's term. Anyone interested in the emotional complexities and the ethical stakes of our changing connections to each other across lines of species, gender, family, and much else will find this an immensely rewarding book.
Cary Wolfe, Bruce and Elizabeth Dunlevie Professor of English, Rice University, coauthor of Philosophy and Animal Life