Article ID: CBB322249205

Linked Descendants: Genetic-genealogical Practices and the Refusal of Ignorance around Slavery (2022)

unapi

The recent expansion of online genetic-genealogical networks has been hailed as a development that could break racial taboos in the United States by providing irrefutable evidence of the myriad historical and genetic links—many originating in slavery—connecting white and black families. These predictions are countered, however, by a scholarly literature on “white ignorance,” defined as an active historical project that works to prevent privileged groups from apprehending their links to, and positionality within, systems of racial oppression. This paper mobilizes concepts from the fields of agnotology and epistemic ethics to assess how far genetic-genealogical technologies can contribute to redressing racialized epistemic inequities between slave and slaveholder descendants, by inducing the latter to respond to the former’s kinship claims and give access to data that could help reconstruct their linked family histories. Drawing on ethnographic and interview data that foreground the experiences of African American genealogists, the study outlines the structural and affective dimensions that have converged to enable white ignorance regarding genealogies of slavery and discusses ethical and technical solutions proposed by genealogical practitioners to redress the racialized power dynamics that continue to condition access to, and public acceptance of, family history knowledge relating to slavery.

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Authors & Contributors
Wajcman, Judy
Fox, Mary Frank
Hicks, Marie
Landström, Catharina
Lee, Catherine Y.
McGoey, Linsey
Journals
Science, Technology, and Human Values
American Studies
Engineering Studies
History and Technology
History of Science
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Publishers
The University of North Carolina Press
Columbia University Press
MIT Press
Oxford University Press
University of Chicago Press
University of North Carolina Press
Concepts
Science and technology studies (STS)
Equality; inequality
Technology and society
Gender
Public policy
Slavery
People
Hwang Woo-suk
Mason, Katherine
Piketty, Thomas, 1971- Économie des inégalités. English
Time Periods
21st century
20th century
18th century
19th century
20th century, late
Places
United States
Brazil
India
Korea
Mexico
Finland
Institutions
University of the Republic
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