IntersectionAllies
Love Without Bounds
The follow-up to the critically acclaimed IntersectionAllies: We Make Room for All, Love without Bounds: An IntersectionAllies Book about Families is a one-of-a-kind celebration of "alternative" families that often go under- or misrepresented in traditional media, giving kids the tools to understand how global and state inequality and inequity may affect their family structure but do not get to define it.
Love without Bounds is perfect for:
- Kids in multicultural, LGBTQ+, adoptive, foster care, single-parent, blended, transnational, military, and chosen families, as well as families impacted by incarceration, detention, and deportation
- Kids in traditional families who may want to understand their friends' and loved ones' families better
- Parents who want to engage their children in age-appropriate activism
- Parents, educators, and practitioners who are searching for ways to explain the role of laws and government in different people's family life
- Kids who have yet to see themselves and their experiences reflected in books and other media
- Adults trying to see reflections of their own family structures
- Librarians looking to build community and create dialogue in their neighborhoods
- Booksellers looking to build out their diversity-related offerings to kids in the most inclusive way possible
Chelsea Johnson became interested in feminism through writers like Audre Lorde and Patricia Hill Collins as an undergraduate at Spelman College, a historically Black college for women in Atlanta, GA. She went on to study the politics of race, class, gender, and fashion at the University of Southern California, where she earned her PhD in sociology and gender studies in 2019. Chelsea now works as an applied researcher in the corporate world, using intersectionality to help companies design products with underrepresented groups in mind, and lives in Los Angeles, CA.
LaToya Council was born and raised in Dudley, North Carolina. She was first introduced to the concept of intersectionality at Spelman College, which inspired her scholarship, activism, and vision for a more inclusive world. LaToya went on to earn her MA in sociology at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and is currently finishing up her PhD in sociology at the University of Southern California. Her research theorizes how race, class, and gender shape work and family life.
Carolyn Choi was born to immigrant parents in Los Angeles. After graduating with her BA from UCLA, Carolyn began community organizing with an immigrant rights organization in Los Angeles, where intersectionality was central to her advocacy work. She later went abroad to earn an MS in sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science and is currently at the University of Southern California, finishing up her PhD. Carolyn's research touches on the topics of human trafficking and international migration.
Ashley Seil Smith, illustrator, was raised in California and the conservative South, the last of five daughters. After studying women's health in India during undergrad, Ashley committed to public conversations about feminism and bodies, and created a menstruation museum and period box subscription company. She received her MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York City and now works full-time as an artist. Her work has been featured in the New York Times, Lenny, and Forbes. She lives and works in New York City.