
New Books Network LiLi Johnson, "Technologies of Kinship: Asian American Racialization and the Making of Family" (NYU Press, 2025)
Jan 28, 2026
LiLi Johnson, Assistant Professor of English and Gender and Women’s Studies at Dalhousie University and author of Technologies of Kinship, explores how bureaucracy, photography, digital platforms, and genetic testing shape Asian American family-making. She discusses archival discoveries like paper families, transnational matchmaking, referral photos in adoption, online dating/donor markets, and the rise of genetic intimacy.
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Kinship As A Social Technology
- LiLi Johnson frames kinship as a social technology shaped by systems like immigration law, photography, and ancestry tests.
- These technologies co-constitute race and family rather than merely reflecting biological ties.
Touching Archives Changes Interpretation
- Johnson describes the embodied experience of touching archival immigration papers and treating archives as research encounters.
- She uses that tactile encounter to imagine how inspectors read documents and how paper produces kinship claims.
Paper Makes Families Real
- During Chinese Exclusion, 'paper families' were produced because paper and bureaucracy validated kinship claims.
- Government paperwork functioned as a technology that created rather than merely recorded family ties.

