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Alternate Roots - Ethnicity, Race, and Identity in Genealogy Media (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,096
Discovery Miles 10 960
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Alternate Roots - Ethnicity, Race, and Identity in Genealogy Media (Paperback)
Series: Race, Rhetoric, and Media Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In recent years, the media has attributed the increasing numbers of
people producing family trees to the aging of baby boomers, a sense
of mortality, a proliferation of internet genealogy sites, and a
growing pride in ethnicity. A spate of new genealogy-themed
television series and internet-driven genetic ancestry testing
services have now emerged, capitalizing on the mapping of the human
genome in 2003. This genealogical trend poses a need for critical
analysis, particularly along the lines of race and ethnicity. In
contextual ways, as she intersperses an account of her own journey
chronicling her Italian and Italian American family history,
Christine Scodari lays out how family historians can understand
intersections involving race and/or ethnicity and other identities
inflecting families. Through engagement in and with genealogical
texts and practices, such as the classic television series Roots,
Ancestry.com, and Henry Louis Gates's documentaries, Scodari also
explains how to interpret their import to historical and ongoing
relations of power beyond the family. Perspectives on hybridity and
intersectionality gesture toward making connections not only
between and among identities, but also between localized findings
and broader contexts that might, given only cursory attention, seem
tangential to chronicling a family history. Given current tools,
texts, practices, cultural contexts, and technologies, Scodari's
study determines whether a critical genealogy around race,
ethnicity, and intersectional identities is viable. She delves into
the implications of adoption, orientation, and migration while also
investigating her own genealogy, examining the racial, ethnic
experiences of her forebears and positioning them within larger,
cross-cultural contexts. There is little research on genealogical
media in relation to race and ethnicity. Thus, Scodari blends
cultural studies, critical media studies, and her own genealogy as
a critical pursuit to interrogate issues bound up in the
nuts-and-bolts of engaging in family history.
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