Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted March 31 Diamond Member Share Posted March 31 Can genetic genealogy restore family narratives disrupted by the transatlantic ****** trade? Many ******** Americans descended from enslaved ancestors are working to trace their family histories by combining genealogical records and historical documents. Such efforts can connect them to living relatives and forge new sense of identity rooted in specific ancestral lineages and homelands, says University of Illinois anthropology professor LaKisha David. Credit: Fred Zwicky Some political figures seek to remove references to slavery from the study of ********* history, adding to the vast knowledge gaps that stem from the transatlantic ****** trade. To better understand these histories, scholars and individuals are turning to genetic genealogy to discover and retrace descendant-family lineages. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up published in the journal ********* Anthropologist, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign anthropology professor LaKisha David described these efforts. She spoke about the work to News Bureau life sciences editor Diana Yates. What is genetic genealogy and how can it help people trace their family histories? Genetic genealogy combines DNA testing with traditional family history research to help people discover ancestral origins and living relatives. Autosomal DNA tests from consumer companies like 23andMe and AncestryDNA can identify shared genetic segments that indicate cousin relationships going back several generations. By finding and connecting with genetic matches, individuals can extend their family trees beyond the limitations of historical records. This technology is particularly valuable for descendants of ancestors who left little or no documentary trace due to social, political or economic marginalization. By engaging with distant cousins who share specific ancestral lineages, people can recover lost branches of their family trees and gain a more complete sense of the histories that may have impacted their lives. What special genealogical challenges arise for the descendants of those who were enslaved in the U.S.? For ******** Americans descended from enslaved ancestors, genealogical records alone are often insufficient to trace lineages prior to 1870 when the U.S. census began recording ******** Americans by name. Sometimes the names of ancestors may be listed as property within bills of ***** and estate inventories. This makes it incredibly difficult to trace family lineages through documentation alone. Moreover, slavery systematically fractured ******** ********* family structures through the domestic ****** trade and forced family separations, leading to huge gaps in knowledge about ancestral identities, homelands and kinship ties. So, descendants today often lack a cohesive family narrative extending back prior to slavery. Genetic genealogy offers a way to restore some of these lost connections. How might these explorations of family history connect people living today? Finding living ******** relatives who descend from the same pre-slavery ancestors in ******* provides meaningful validation of family roots and a transnational network of contemporary relatives. It opens the door for ******** Americans and Africans to connect and learn from each other’s family histories and lived experiences. These connections can forge a new sense of identity rooted in specific ancestral lineages and homelands. Why are some descendants reluctant to engage in genetic studies? Given the long history of unethical medical experimentation and discriminatory policies targeting ******** Americans, there is an understandable distrust of biomedical research among some ******** Americans. People worry about the potential misuse of genetic information and the lack of transparency around the use of DNA samples. There are also concerns that genetic ancestry results can be misinterpreted in ways that reinforce biological views of race or impose essentialist notions of ******** identity onto complex diasporic cultures. That said, it’s important to contextualize ******** Americans’ actual engagement in genetic testing. According to national surveys, ****** adults are pursuing genetic ancestry testing at the same rate as the general U.S. population, which challenges the misconception that ******** Americans are universally distrustful of or disinterested in genetic research. The reality is more nuanced. According to a 2019 survey by the Pew Research Center, 15% of all U.S. adults used genetic testing services. In a subsequent survey conducted in 2021 among the ****** U.S. ****** population, 15% of ****** adults reported using these tests to learn more about their family histories. In other words, ****** adults are engaging with genetic ancestry testing at rates comparable to the national average. Many ******** Americans are strategically using consumer testing to fill in genealogical gaps and restore ancestral knowledge that was lost through the disruptions of slavery. The comparable participation rates suggest it is an overgeneralization to say descendants are reluctant to engage in genetic studies. A more accurate assessment is that ******** Americans expect genetic research to be relevant and accountable to their communal interests and needs. By centering descendant perspectives, more researchers will find willing research partners within the ******** ********* population. How do the genetic findings inform individual and community identities? Genetic genealogy profoundly informs ******** ********* identities by restoring ancestral lineages, family narratives and diasporic relationships fractured by slavery. Discovering ******** relatives and hearing those new family narratives provides ******** Americans with new sources of socialization to reshape identity and belonging. ******** Americans in my research experienced an intensified connection to ******** heritage and oftentimes incorporated the ethnicities and family histories of their ******** relatives into their self-concepts. This also provided an embodied sense of transgenerational continuity and cultural rootedness that extends beyond our histories in the U.S. Genetic genealogy also contributes to dialogues about how slavery and colonialism have impacted ****** identities worldwide. By revealing genetic relatedness across ******* and the diaspora, genetic genealogy empowers ******** descendants to redefine identities and kinship beyond the slaveholding frame. Some ******** Americans also cultivated kinship bonds with ******** cousins and, as they engage in actual community-building, they advance new visions of family and ******* belonging that challenge us all to reimagine identity. You describe genetic genealogy as a potentially reparative process. What do you mean by that? The inhumanity of chattel slavery relied on the legal and cultural negation of ******** family integrity and history. Efforts to restore descendant family ties, therefore, constitute a form of restorative justice—not as a substitute for material reparations but as a meaningful reclamation of personhood and heritage. For ******** Americans who have grown up with a sense of ancestral loss and disconnection, this reclamation of family history is deeply humanizing and healing. It replaces the genealogical unknown with tangible knowledge of ancestral histories and kinship ties. Furthermore, genetic genealogy creates pathways for descendants to build actual relationships with contemporary ******** relatives. Cultivating kinship connections and exchanging family histories with ******** cousins can restore an embodied feeling of cultural continuity and communal identity. Identifying ******** genetic relatives also contributes to a larger process of historical truth-telling, cultural healing and diasporic community reconstruction, supplementing our identification with one another based on psychological connections. In this sense, identifying ******** ancestors and living relatives is an act of restorative justice. It is ultimately about (re)claiming the humanity, dignity and agency of enslaved Africans and their descendants, which is an essential component of repairing the harms of slavery. More information: LaKisha T. David, Supporting the use of genetic genealogy in restoring family narratives following the transatlantic ****** trade, ********* Anthropologist (2023). This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up LaKisha T. David, Addressing the feasibility of people of ******** descent finding living ******** relatives using direct‐to‐consumer genetic testing, ********* Journal of Biological Anthropology (2023). This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Provided by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Citation: Q&A: Can genetic genealogy restore family narratives disrupted by the transatlantic ****** trade? (2024, March 31) retrieved 31 March 2024 from This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Science, Physics News, Science news, Technology News, Physics, Materials, Nanotech, Technology, Science #genetic #genealogy #restore #family #narratives #disrupted #transatlantic #****** #trade This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/9147-can-genetic-genealogy-restore-family-narratives-disrupted-by-the-transatlantic-slave-trade/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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