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.
...More
Article
Linsey McGoey;
(March 2017)
The Elusive Rentier Rich: Piketty’s Data Battles and the Power of Absent Evidence
(/isis/citation/CBB574264293/)
Article
Luis Reyes-Galindo;
(January 2017)
Molecular Detector (Non)Technology in Mexico
(/isis/citation/CBB757495306/)
Article
Erin A. Cech;
Anneke Metz;
Jessie L. Smith;
Karen deVries;
(September 2017)
Epistemological Dominance and Social Inequality: Experiences of Native American Science, Engineering, and Health Students
(/isis/citation/CBB816459691/)
Article
Roderic N. Crooks;
(2019)
Times Thirty: Access, Maintenance, and Justice
(/isis/citation/CBB487672024/)
Article
Aliakbar Akbaritabar;
Flaminio Squazzoni;
(May 2021)
Gender Patterns of Publication in Top Sociological Journals
(/isis/citation/CBB721191179/)
Article
Maria Goñi Mazzitelli;
(2021)
Recognizing inequalities, transforming structures: Design and implementation of a care policy at the University of the Republic, Uruguay
(/isis/citation/CBB266303274/)
Article
Mary Frank Fox;
Diana Roldan Rueda;
Gerhard Sonnert;
Amanda Nabors;
Sarah Bartel;
(2022)
Publications about Women, Science, and Engineering: Use of Sex and Gender in Titles over a Forty-six-year Period
(/isis/citation/CBB872647702/)
Article
Kai Lo Andersson;
Catharina Landström;
(2023)
The Sole Engineering Genius: A Professional Identity Not Fit for the Purpose of Gender Equality Projects
(/isis/citation/CBB351777719/)
Book
Thomas S. Mullaney;
Benjamin Peters;
Mar Hicks;
Kavita Philip;
(2021)
Your Computer Is on Fire
(/isis/citation/CBB159272535/)
Article
Judith Sutz;
(May 2018)
Health Inequalities in the Global South: Transforming Inspiring Stories into Effective Policies
(/isis/citation/CBB252110381/)
Article
Alina-Sandra Cucu;
Bridget Kenny;
(2023)
The ordinary lives of crisis: transformations in the realm of work in South Africa and Romania
(/isis/citation/CBB798673791/)
Book
Jeremy Zallen;
(2019)
American Lucifers: The Dark History of Artificial Light, 1750–1865
(/isis/citation/CBB339495003/)
Book
Wajcman, Judy;
(2015)
Pressed for Time: The Acceleration of Life in Digital Capitalism
(/isis/citation/CBB623486492/)
Book
Nigel Dodd;
Wajcman, Judy;
(2017)
The Sociology of Speed: digital, organizational, and social temporalities
(/isis/citation/CBB744821752/)
Article
Catherine Lee;
Torsten H. Voigt;
(2020)
DNA Testing for Family Reunification and the Limits of Biological Truth
(/isis/citation/CBB561265369/)
Book
Oscar De la Torre;
(2018)
The people of the river : Nature and identity in Black Amazonia, 1835-1945
(/isis/citation/CBB610762716/)
Article
Buhm Soon Park;
(2020)
Making matters of fraud: Sociomaterial technology in the case of Hwang and Schatten
(/isis/citation/CBB209912238/)
Article
Leandro Rodriguez Medina;
(2019)
Welcome to South-South dialogues: An introduction to a collaborative project between East Asian Science, Technology and Society, and Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
(/isis/citation/CBB700977264/)
Book
Hannah Star Rogers;
(2022)
Art, Science, and the Politics of Knowledge
(/isis/citation/CBB734293422/)
Article
Remo Fernández Carro;
(April 2021)
What is a scientific article? A principal-agent explanation
(/isis/citation/CBB127208955/)
Be the first to comment!