Family history research has seen a surge in popularity in recent years; however, is this preoccupation with who we are and where we come from new? Archaeological evidence suggests that ancestors played crucial and ubiquitous roles in the identities and cosmologies of past societies. This paper will explore how, in the absence of genealogical websites and DNA testing, kinship structures and understandings of personhood beyond genealogy may have influenced concepts of ancestry. Case studies from later prehistoric Britain will demonstrate the ways in which monuments, objects and human remains themselves created bonds between the living and the dead, prompting us to reflect on genealogy as just one aspect of our identity in the present
This thesis provides the first cultural history of the family history 'phenomenon' of the late twen...
This paper considers two sets of amateur genealogists as specialized kinship artisans. My two sets o...
Two revolutions in using human genetics to investigate the past are beginning to have a profound eff...
Family history research has seen a surge in popularity in recent years; however, is this preoccupati...
Drawing on the 2008 Mass Observation Directive 'Doing Family Research', this article explores the ro...
Genealogy can be described as a way of linking the past to the present using genealogical and histor...
Introduction. The paper considers the problem of cultural identity influenced by the study of ancest...
This article considers the meanings of ordinary genealogy for English practitioners in East Anglia, ...
Thanks to next generation sequencing (NGS), we can now access ancient biological relationships, incl...
This paper explores how Africana Studies offer the opportunity for a new worldview that may supplant...
Colleen Gibbs examines the way that studies of DNA provide potential new means of understanding iden...
Archaeologists frequently excavate historic burials and the vast majority of the graves will be unid...
Genealogy, once a specialized research practice, is increasingly a common social practice enabled by...
This article introduces some early data from the Leverhulme Trust-funded research programme, 'The Im...
To explore kinship practices at chambered tombs in Early Neolithic Britain, here we combined archaeo...
This thesis provides the first cultural history of the family history 'phenomenon' of the late twen...
This paper considers two sets of amateur genealogists as specialized kinship artisans. My two sets o...
Two revolutions in using human genetics to investigate the past are beginning to have a profound eff...
Family history research has seen a surge in popularity in recent years; however, is this preoccupati...
Drawing on the 2008 Mass Observation Directive 'Doing Family Research', this article explores the ro...
Genealogy can be described as a way of linking the past to the present using genealogical and histor...
Introduction. The paper considers the problem of cultural identity influenced by the study of ancest...
This article considers the meanings of ordinary genealogy for English practitioners in East Anglia, ...
Thanks to next generation sequencing (NGS), we can now access ancient biological relationships, incl...
This paper explores how Africana Studies offer the opportunity for a new worldview that may supplant...
Colleen Gibbs examines the way that studies of DNA provide potential new means of understanding iden...
Archaeologists frequently excavate historic burials and the vast majority of the graves will be unid...
Genealogy, once a specialized research practice, is increasingly a common social practice enabled by...
This article introduces some early data from the Leverhulme Trust-funded research programme, 'The Im...
To explore kinship practices at chambered tombs in Early Neolithic Britain, here we combined archaeo...
This thesis provides the first cultural history of the family history 'phenomenon' of the late twen...
This paper considers two sets of amateur genealogists as specialized kinship artisans. My two sets o...
Two revolutions in using human genetics to investigate the past are beginning to have a profound eff...