"I Assumed He Didn't Exist": The Birth Father as the Invisible Member of the Adoption Kinship Network

Salvo Agoglia, Irene; Herrera, Florencia

Abstract

Historically, paternity has been constructed on the basis of uncertainty. Men and fathers have been underrepresented in studies of reproductive processes and parenting. In adoption, the figure of the birth father has been invisibilized and stereotyped. As part of a qualitative study of origins, identity, and adoption, carried out in Chile, the narratives about their birth father of adults, who had been adopted and sought their origins, were analyzed. The results show that (a) most interviewees had not thought to seek their birth father because they assumed he "did not exist"; (b) information about him is mediated by the birth mother, who acts as a gatekeeper; and (c) when the figure is present, it is usually depersonalized as genetic material or personalized negatively. The birth father omission in the adoption process poses challenges for both past and contemporary adoptions, in which birth fathers are ever more visible and heterogeneous.

Más información

Título según WOS: "I Assumed He Didn't Exist": The Birth Father as the Invisible Member of the Adoption Kinship Network
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF FAMILY ISSUES
Volumen: 42
Número: 5
Editorial: SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 984
Página final: 1006
DOI:

10.1177/0192513X20984509

Notas: ISI