
New Books in Science, Technology, and Society 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, studies how technologies shape Asian American kinship. She explains 'technologies of kinship' from bureaucracy and immigration papers to photos, online profiles, and ancestry tests. Conversations cover paper families, transnational adoption, digital matchmaking and how tech reshapes racial categories and family formation.
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Technology Means More Than Machines
- Johnson expands 'technology' beyond lab tools to include paperwork, photography, and online platforms that shape family formation.
- She argues these systems actively produce kinship and racial identity rather than merely reflecting them.
Touching Archives Shaped Her Analysis
- Johnson describes the tactile archival encounter of touching immigration folders and photographs while researching paper families.
- She frames archival work as an embodied encounter that shapes how she reads documents and government scrutiny.
Paper Produces Family Claims
- 'Paper families' during Chinese exclusion show how documents create kinship claims and immigration access.
- Johnson uses this to highlight how government paperwork can both validate and produce family ties.

