This book offers a nuanced picture of mixed family life in the UK.
Specifically, the book explores how parents from different backgrounds
create a place of belonging for their children, while also negotiating
difference and attempting to transmit various aspects of their cultures,
including religion, hobbies, language and food to their mixed children.
Based on data collected from 26 months of fieldwork, the author
concludes that the intergenerational transmission of culture, instead of
being tied to the idea of "national culture", is actually more organic
and fluid, allowing individuals to share their "cultures", from
traditions and customs to preferences and habits, with the next
generation.
As mixedness increasingly becomes the norm in our global society, the
book will be of interest to students and scholars of race, ethnicity and
family studies, as well as social workers, school teachers, counsellors,
and parents and kin of mixed children.