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INTRODUCTION
Genealogy Today
The true picture of the past flits by. The past can be seized only as an image that flashes up when it can be recognized and is never seen againâŚ. For every image of the past that is not recognized by the present as one of its own concerns threatens to disappear irretrievably.
âWALTER BENJAMIN, âTHESES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORYâ
JOURNEYING INTO FAMILY HISTORY
Beyond the occasional query when I was a child, my interest in something called family history began in the early 1980s, not long after a reunionâor more precisely, a reconciliationâbrought together the Italian and American branches of my motherâs paternal-line family. In addition to grandparents, parents, siblings, aunts, uncles, and cousins along this lineage, the American branch included my motherâs nieces, nephews, and in-laws, some of whom were/are also genetically related to my father because of three marriages between the two families.
If not for the politics of class, which, in the context of southern Italian identity was intimately connected to race and ethnicity, there might never have been a need for reconciliation. My motherâs patrilineal great-grandfather, a landowner and doctor, had disinherited his eldest son, her immigrant grandfather, when he married a woman from a family of contadini (peasant farmers) who worked on his land in the southern region of Calabria, where elevated class status stood as a bulwark against racially tinged prejudice emanating from the north. But one of my motherâs aunts wanted to reconcile with her Italian family before she died, and her wish was fulfilled.
Interest piqued again when my father took early retirement from the federal government and had lots of time on his hands. Our family home was located in the suburbs of Washington, DC, providing him with easy access to the National Archives, where he obtained copies of the 1900 census and naturalization certificates relating to his paternal lineage. Somewhat later, my fatherâs little sister, who was more like a big sister to me, gave me some family mementos. A linen-covered box of letters exchanged by her parents when they were courting in the 1920s was particularly intriguing. In one 1923 letter (figure 1.1), the seventeen-year-old girl who would become my grandmother commiserates with the young man who would become my grandfather about her older brotherâs disapproval of their relationship. The brother was apparently having relationship issues of his own. My grandparents-to-be were communicating by mail even though they both lived in Brooklyn, proving once again that forms of social media interaction existed long before the digital age. I later discovered that at age six, my future grandmother had arrived by ship on American shores just as the Titanic, operated by the same shipping line, met its tragic end.
Figure 1.1: 1923 courtship letter from my grandmother to my grandfather.
In the early 1990s, I acquired rudimentary software, information, photos, and documents and cobbled together a five-generation family tree to transcribe into an old-media family history album for my parents. As a baby boomer, I was among those later discussed in news reports of genealogyâs new popularity who were engaging in the hobby with the help of digital media (see Wee; Shute). I believe, however, that the journey into family history is often about any generation navigating middle age, caring for elders in decline, and coming to terms with the inevitable. Like many cultural practices associated with people in their middle or senior years, genealogy has been woefully understudied, especially in terms of marginal identities.
In 2003, my mother suffered the first of a series of strokes that eventually took her to a nursing home. Only a few years later, my father began displaying signs of what we later learned was Alzheimerâs disease. In addition to many other things, memory was at stake.
In 2010, I took family leave from my job to help oversee my parentsâ care and refocused on genealogy, this time using Internet archives, commercial websites, and newer software designed for integration with online databases. My fatherâs little sister had died in 2009, bequeathing to me additional family artifacts. After I determined that many cultural texts and practices of family history warranted critical academic analysis and that I could simultaneously engage in family history and partially fulfill my role as a scholar, I became even more engrossed in the activity. I set about learning a language that I had mostly heard as a child when adults felt a need to swear in the presence of tender ears. I read up on Italian and Italian American history, consulted with close and distant family via old and new media, ordered microfilm of Italian records, and watched family history television.
My explorations of Italian American history deepened my sense of ethnic identity as well as my empathy for and understanding of those who have experienced ethnically and/or racially based or inflected struggles that in many cases have been exceedingly brutal and unrelenting. In these terms, my racial privilege in the here and now became even clearer. I learned more about the 1891 lynching of eleven Sicilians in New Orleans as described in the 2015 PBS documentary series The Italian Americans. I also probed the suppression of Italian language and culture during World War II, which contributed to the subsequent decline of spoken Italian in the United States (see DiStasi). My father and I had our DNA tested for genetic ancestry. Although I quickly confirmed that many scholars dismiss genealogy as a self-involved, elitist practice, I tested myself to reenvision it as a critical pursuit in my interrogation of relevant institutions of production, technologies, texts, audience readings, and participatory practices bound up in the media and culture of family history.
ISSUES AND TRAJECTORIES
On 6 June 2015, the first Global Family Reunion, founded by author/journalist A. J. Jacobs, convened in New York City with the goal of highlighting the interrelatedness of the wider human family, in part through establishment of a global family tree linking trees posted on various websites. For the previous two decades, the media had noted the increasing numbers of individuals fashioning family trees prompted by, among other things, the aging of baby boomers, a âsense of mortalityâ (Wee A1), a âproliferation of Internet genealogy sites,â and a âgrowing pride in ethnicityâ (Shute 76). According to Eric Weeâs 1997 assessment in the Washington Post, not since TVâs airing of Roots twenty years earlier had the hobby been so popular. A spate of new genealogy-themed television series and Internet-driven genetic ancestry testing services capitalizing on the 2003 mapping of the human genome have now emerged. These developments present new and pressing issues for critical analysis, particularly along the lines of race and ethnicity.
Some observers critique genealogy as a limiting, ânavel-gazingâ (Kramer âMediatizingâ 442) pursuit devoted to, as philosopher Martin Saar cautions, âyour own culture, your milieu, your family, your genusâ (236). Also implying that criticism is not the amateur genealogistâs first order of business, communication scholar Ronald Bishop found accuracy to be the central concern among his family historian survey subjects. One of them declared, âI just love to read and know more about my ancestors and I donât care what it is just so I can properly document itâ (âGrand Schemeâ 405).
Other observers emphasize that family historians seek to connect their forebears to historical events. For instance, sociologist Anne-Marie Kramer asserts that âgenealogy allows people to personalise the pastâ (qtd. in Amot). Similarly, Neil Silberman and Margaret Purser, writing in the field of heritage studies, argue that genealogy has been transformed from a âpassively acquired record of a pedigree to reinforce elite social status or inheritanceâ into a âprocessâ and âfacilitator of reconnectionâin this case, to historyâ (locations 851â56). François Weilâs Family Trees, an American history of genealogy, acknowledges that it has been practiced not only as a âgoal in itselfâ or as a âmeans for economic, moral, or religious results or benefitsâ but also as a way to establish âindividual and collective identitiesâ (locations 68â74).
These predispositions might still preclude a critical postureâan ability to individuate and empathize with people otherwise perceived only as statistics or abstractions and cultivate compassion and action in response to their oppositional struggles. Consequently, making the leap from individual to collective identity is only one leg of this journey toward a critical genealogy; recognizing affinities between oneâs own collectives and those of others, often separated by time, space, race, ethnicity, class, and/or gender may be more illuminating and demanding. Acknowledging certain affinities while observing distinctions related to specific identities and contexts is harder yet.
In suggesting that one cannot fully appreciate an individual genealogy without positioning it within a constellation of families, peoples, eras, and events, the Global Family Reunion seeks to stimulate such critical possibilities. In one aspect, it envisions genealogy as family history, which goes beyond the mere construction of a pedigree (see Guelke and Timothy 1â2). Scholars also gesture in this direction. Saar contends that genealogy has its greatest critical impact âwhen it turns to objects whose meaning and validity is affected by revealing their historicityâ (233). Similarly, Christine Sleeter suggests that white educators investigate their family histories to perform a âcritical analysis of their own lives, examining themselves as culturally and historically located beingsâ (121). From the perspectives of journalism and memory studies, Barbie Zelizer acknowledges that collective memory goes beyond the personal to the circulation of memories and histories given meaning by a group before potentially attaining universality. Anthropologists Angela Labrador and Elizabeth Chilton attest that genealogy is not only âindividualized ⌠but immersed in the social concepts of geography, demography, citizenship, ethnicity, tourism, and diasporic movementsâ and thus âcan be elitist and exclusionary, and/or democratic and inclusionaryâ (5â6). Film studies scholar Annette Kuhn argues that family reminiscences and artifacts encourage the exploration of âconnections between âpublicâ historical events, structures of feeling, family dramas, relations of class, national identity and gender, and âpersonalâ memoryâ (5). And in âGenealogical Identities,â geographer Catherine Nash concurs that genealogy offers an expansive sense of identity that can lead one to consider the plight of others.
Consequently, despite the possible pitfalls, engaging in or with genealogy media and culture can unearth various histories of oppression, domination, resistance, flight, and dispersal and provide recognition of associations with and distinctions from ongoing struggles. However, deliberate interventions or unanticipated insights must occur to rupture and liberate otherwise hemmed-in public displays and/or practices of heritage.
As my parentsâ faltering memories prompted me to revisit the genealogical project I adopted from my father years earlier, I immersed myself in genealogy culture. As a consequence of the degree of cultural competency I possess as a professor of critical media and cultural studies, I endeavored to maintain a self-reflexive, autoethnographic relationship to genealogyâs texts and practices and consciously privileged critical perspectives based in race/ethnicity, class, gender, and nation, among others. Although genealogy appears in the title of this volume, which often uses that term interchangeably with family history, a critical perspective necessarily grows out of the broader endeavor of family history, which utilizes interpersonal information and family narratives and goes beyond the direct ancestral line.
However, one might ask whether such a critical approach can be translated to a wider swath of genealogy practitioners. Venturing beyond the nuts and bolts of genealogical practice, my analysis widens the scope to include an assortment of relevant critical objects as it answers an overarching question: To what extent do media texts, practices, institutions, tools, and technologies of family history mobilize critical postures and objectives regarding race and ethnicity, and how might those objectives be rendered more complicit with such an orientation? In grappling with this broad-ranging query, subsidiary issues arise. First, it is crucial to determine whether the components of family history culture produce, in terms of race and ethnicity, critical negotiations of individual identity, connections between the individual and the collective historical, and/or telling links between historical and contemporary struggles.
The second and third questions follow from this starting point: Do family history practices, institutions, representations, and participatory cultures resistively probe racial and ethnic identity in terms of hybridity and/or intersectionality and/or hegemonically reproduce postracial and other post-orientations in which racist, nativist, or other exclusionary perspectives go unrecognized? Focusing on the hybridity of identitiesâwhat cultural studies theorist Stuart Hall refers to as their âruptures and discontinuitiesâ (âCultural Identityâ 225)âis vital in evaluating representations and interpretations of history and identity in genealogy cultures. Hall maintains that one should not characterize diasporic identities âby essence or purity, but ⌠by a conception of âidentityâ which lives with and through, not despite, difference; by hybridityâ (235). Communication scholar Catherine Squires pronounces hybridity to be the âliminal space where negotiation and struggle occurâ but cautions that while âhybridity offers potential to subvert dominant narratives of purity ⌠these opportunities are neither guaranteed nor the only possibilities that may emergeâ (211). Sociologist Katharine Tylerâs ethnographic research highlights genealogyâs role in establishing mixed-race identity, which, she argues, enables opposition to âthe essentialist folk conception of racial differenceâ (476). Acknowledging hybrid identity as part of the process, geographer Dallen Timothy discerns that those family history practitioners who are the âmore visible targets of racism and bigotryâ can benefit from family history tourism, which aids in the negotiation of âdiasporic identitiesâ (129). Conversely, media scholar Angharad Valdivia warns that âwe need to explore the gains and losses incurred in cultural and population mixtures rather than acritically celebrate mixture, as commodity culture urges us to doâ (locations 1296â1302).
Moreover, in theorizing hybridity through a prism of intersectionalityâthat is, the recognition of manifestations of oppression that arise when two or more aspects of identity are taken togetherâsociologist Patricia Hill Collins argues that the impact of having multiple, marginal identities is not simply additive:
Intersectionality refers to particular forms of intersecting oppressions, for example, intersections of race and gender, or of sexuality and nation. Intersectional paradigms remind us that oppression cannot be reduced to one fundamental type, and that oppressions work together in producing injustice. (Black 21)
In her article on intersections of identity as they operate within the family construct, Collins clarifies: âAs opposed to examining gender, race, class, and nation, as separate systems of oppression, intersectionality explores how these systems mutually construct one anotherâ (âAll in the Familyâ 63). She argues that it is within the presumably ânaturalâ family that people first position themselves within hierarchical arrangements relating to race, gender, ethnicity, class, and sexuality and understand them as similarly ânatural.â For example, a familial knowledge that renders children subordinate to their parents and women subordinate to their ostensibly more mature husbands is echoed in a societal belief that nonwhites are âintellectually underdevelopedâ (65). In such a way, hierarchies are internalized as ânaturalâ and inevitable. Racial constructions operating in other times and/or places can likewise be unpacked, Collins argues, as long as race, however conceived, operates as a âprinciple of social organizationâ (66).
This volume looks not only at how family historians might understand, in specifically contextual ways, intersections involving race and/or ethnicity that might have formed within families but also at how to decipher their relevance to historical and ongoing relations of power beyond the family through engagement in/with the texts and practices of genealogy media and culture. Perspectives related to hybridity and intersectionality gesture toward making connections between and among identities as well as between localized findings and broader contexts and issues that might, given only cursory attention, seem tangential to chronicling a particular family history.
Considering the hegemonic impacts of postidentity discourses grounded in postracial, postfeminist, and/or postclass orientations is also crucial. Postracism (or postracialism) has variously been referred to as postâcivil rights, or the notion that the civil rights movement has done its work, creating a âbacklashâ against its supposed excesses (Springer 253), or as postrace, the âcontinued centrality of race within this ideology where race is ostensibly immaterialâ (Joseph 521). Postfeminism follows suit. For gender studies analysts Elaine Hall and Marnie Rodriguez, postfeminismâs key claim is that feminism has advanced the status of women but no longer applies, since younger women view sexism as individual, not systemic. Yvonne Tasker and Diane Negra, film studies theorists, add that âpostfeminist culture ⌠works to commodify feminism via the figure of a woman as empowered consumerâ (2). Arguing for the pivotal role of class, communication scholar Kathleen Feyh writes that post-Marxism âprovides ideological support, even radical cover, to neoliberal capitalismâ (237). Communication scholar Kent Ono links class with postracism, maintaining that the latter âreproduces the age-old mythology ⌠that by pulling oneself up by oneâs bootstraps, working hard, acting ethically, playing fair, and not asking for help it is possible to achieve the American dreamâ (229). Whether in terms or race, ethnicity, gender, class, and/or other factors, it is vital to decipher whether genealogy-related representations, such as those contained in the plethora of recent celebrity family history television programs, fixate on transcendent, contemporary figures, implying that the marginality that may have challenged them or their families in the past is no longer operative.
Beyo...