Kinship in the Fiction of N.K. Jemisin: Relations of Power and Resistance examines the work of N.K. Jemisin through the lens of kinship studies. In a world increasingly suffering the effects of climate change, currently undergoing a sixth mass extinction, and where anti-democratic, racist and misogynistic movements are gaining ground in many societies, there is an urgent need to re-imagine our most intimate relations and the webs of kinship that form our societies, but also connect us to the more-than-human world. The essays in this collection shed new light on the ways in which Jemisin's fiction does such re-imaginative work and explores both the contemporary moment and the potential for a future that is other than our present.
Contributions by: Jennifer Ash, Berit Åström, Jenny Bonnevier, Marinette Grimbeek, Megan Lynn Isaac, Emily Lange, Regina Yung Lee, Michael Pitts, Mark Soderstrom, Alexandra Stamson, Lisa Swanstrom