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June 21, 2020

Incarcerated Fathers. Trans Fathers. Founding Fathers.

An alternative father’s day reading list.

From incarcerated fathers, to trans fathers, to the question of who is your father, today’s picks comprise an alternative father’s day reading list. We highlight the men who sought to challenge traditional norms of fatherhood by emancipating children from their parents, and we challenge the testosterone enthusiasts who argue that “real men” can’t be caregivers. 

We also have an excerpt from Barnard historian Nara Milanich’s book Paternity: The Elusive Quest for the FatherAt the very moment that DNA testing has promised paternal certainty for the first time in human history, she argues that uncertainty about fatherhood as a cultural force appears as powerful as ever. Above all, this is because “science was never capable of finding the father in the first place. . . . The truly significant question about paternity is not empirical—Who is the father?—but normative: What do we want him to be?” In the age of modern genetics, the answer to the question “Who’s your daddy?” remains as complicated as ever.

As soon as there was a Constitution, fights about its meaning began.

William Hogeland

A childhood steeped in guns shows that toxic masculinity and racism are at the heart of U.S. gun culture.

Wallter Johnson
Fiction

A tale of forbidden love in an age when corporations have replaced government.

Jordy Rosenberg

Men's hormone levels correlate with their pregnant partners. Some men even experience morning sickness.

Anne Fausto-Sterling

Poetry is offering new candor about the ways men care for their children.

Stephanie Burt

More than 1.5 million children currently have a parent in prison; for 94 percent of these children, that parent is the father.

Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Mary Lyndon Shanley

Seventies activists wanted to emancipate kids and destroy the nuclear family—so how did we end up with gay marriage instead?

Michael Bronski

The meaning of fatherhood remains elusive, even in the age of DNA-based paternity testing.

Nara Milanich

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Poetry

In the parallel world in which gesture is followed /
by recompense

Suzanne Gardinier

The solidarity movement doesn’t have a single leader—and it doesn’t need one.

Ayça Çubukçu

You are keeping no one safe, except for your donors, trustees, and the university’s endowment.

Robin D. G. Kelley

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