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What do Americans think "race" means? What determines one's race-appearance, ancestry, genes, or culture? How do education, government, and business influence our views on race? To unravel these complex questions, Ann Morning takes a close look at how scientists are influencing ideas about race through teaching and textbooks. Drawing from in-depth interviews with biologists, anthropologists, and undergraduates, Morning explores different conceptions of race-finding for example, that while many sociologists now assume that race is a social invention or "construct," anthropologists and biologists are far from such a consensus. She discusses powerful new genetic accounts of race, and considers how corporations and the government use scientific research-for example, in designing DNA ancestry tests or census questionnaires-in ways that often reinforce the idea that race is biologically determined. Widening the debate about race beyond the pages of scholarly journals, The Nature of Race dissects competing definitions in straightforward language to reveal the logic and assumptions underpinning today's claims about human difference.
Race. --- Racism in anthropology. --- Racism in education. --- Racism in textbooks. --- Race --- Racism in anthropology --- Racism in education --- Racism in textbooks --- Anthropology --- Social Sciences --- Physical Anthropology --- Discrimination in education --- Textbooks --- Education --- Physical anthropology --- Racisme en anthropologie --- Racisme en éducation --- Racisme dans les manuels d'enseignement supérieur --- america. --- ancestry. --- anthropologists. --- anthropology. --- biological sciences. --- biologists. --- contemporary society. --- critical analysis. --- dna testing. --- education system. --- genetics. --- human biology. --- human differences. --- nonfiction. --- physiology. --- race and culture. --- race in america. --- racial differences. --- racial issues. --- researchers. --- scientific perspective. --- scientists. --- social constructs. --- sociologists. --- sociology. --- students. --- textbooks. --- theoretical. --- us government.
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The articles in this Special Issue of Genealogy titled “Focus of Family Historians: How Ancestor Research Affects Self-Understanding and Well-Being” cover topics including the psychosocial motivations that impel family history research, its therapeutic and healing aspects, and the emotional outcomes of dealing with unexpected findings. Broader issues, such as the ubiquity of ancestral acknowledgement and veneration throughout history and its links with religion are also explored. Papers include scholarly interpretations of case-based material, empirical research, and interpretive literature reviews emanating from a wide range of social science disciplines.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- n/a --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood
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The articles in this Special Issue of Genealogy titled “Focus of Family Historians: How Ancestor Research Affects Self-Understanding and Well-Being” cover topics including the psychosocial motivations that impel family history research, its therapeutic and healing aspects, and the emotional outcomes of dealing with unexpected findings. Broader issues, such as the ubiquity of ancestral acknowledgement and veneration throughout history and its links with religion are also explored. Papers include scholarly interpretations of case-based material, empirical research, and interpretive literature reviews emanating from a wide range of social science disciplines.
family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- n/a --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood
Choose an application
The articles in this Special Issue of Genealogy titled “Focus of Family Historians: How Ancestor Research Affects Self-Understanding and Well-Being” cover topics including the psychosocial motivations that impel family history research, its therapeutic and healing aspects, and the emotional outcomes of dealing with unexpected findings. Broader issues, such as the ubiquity of ancestral acknowledgement and veneration throughout history and its links with religion are also explored. Papers include scholarly interpretations of case-based material, empirical research, and interpretive literature reviews emanating from a wide range of social science disciplines.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood --- family history --- psychology --- ancestry --- identity construction --- family tree --- war trauma --- attachment --- identity --- immigration --- forgetting --- emotional geography --- context --- environments --- homelands --- heritage --- genealogical motivation --- family history and identity --- family history and altruism --- family history and curiosity --- secular rituals --- post-religious --- sacred stories --- pilgrimage --- family ritual --- ceremony --- historical consciousness --- family history research --- family historians --- temporal orientation --- case study --- adoption --- late-discovery --- family secrets --- shock and losses --- historical trauma --- traumatic reenactment --- psychoanalysis --- infant attachment --- stress biology --- Adverse Childhood Experiences --- genealogy --- depression --- trauma --- prolonged grief disorder --- adverse childhood experiences --- alcoholic --- alcohol use disorder --- bereavement --- biological identity --- family identity --- DNA testing --- thematic analysis --- biogeographic ancestry --- archaeology --- bereavement studies --- continuing bonds --- problematic stuff --- ancestors --- personhood
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