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Book cover for Kinship Across Distances open access

Publication date: 1 January 2027

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.9781806552337

Number of illustrations: 8

Kinship Across Distances

Gender, generation and class dynamics in Chinese translocal families

Zhenwei Wang (Author)

Kinship Across Distances offers a richly textured ethnography of family life in an era of mobility, tracing how Chinese families sustain intimacy, obligation and care while living apart. Based on multi-sited fieldwork conducted between 2020 and 2024 across urban Hangzhou and rural hometowns in eastern China, the book examines how kinship is actively made across distance through everyday practices of visiting, remittance, storytelling and digital supervision.

Introducing the concept of ‘translocal kinning’, Zhenwei Wang reconceptualizes family not as a static unit anchored in co-residence, but as an ongoing, care-centred process forged through movement, mediation and negotiation. The book shows how efforts to ‘do family’ across space both reproduce and reconfigure hierarchies of gender, generation and class. Women remain central caregivers, yet their agency is shaped by intergenerational support and classed resources; grandparents emerge as key brokers of emotional and practical care, and digital technologies reshape what presence, supervision and responsibility mean at a distance.

By foregrounding care as a multidirectional flow rather than a one-way obligation, this book challenges dominant narratives of family breakdown under migration. It offers a timely and original contribution to scholarship on kinship, migration and social reproduction, while providing a grounded critique of how private family struggles are entangled with China’s marketization reform.

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