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    Remediating Viking origins: genetic code as archival memory of the remote past (pre-print version)

    Citation

    Scully, M.D., King, T. and Brown, S.D., 2013. Remediating Viking origins: genetic code as archival memory of the remote past. Sociology, 47 (5), pp. 921 - 938. ISSN; 0038-0385
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    Date
    2013
    Author
    Scully, Marc
    Brown, Steven D.
    King, Turi
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    Scully, M.D., King, T. and Brown, S.D., 2013. Remediating Viking origins: genetic code as archival memory of the remote past. Sociology, 47 (5), pp. 921 - 938. ISSN; 0038-0385
    Abstract
    This article introduces some early data from the Leverhulme Trust-funded research programme, ‘The Impact of the Diasporas on the Making of Britain: evidence, memories, inventions’. One of the interdisciplinary foci of the programme, which incorporates insights from genetics, history, archaeology, linguistics and social psychology, is to investigate how genetic evidence of ancestry is incorporated into identity narratives. In particular, we investigate how ‘applied genetic history’ shapes individual and familial narratives, which are then situated within macro-narratives of the nation and collective memories of immigration and indigenism. It is argued that the construction of genetic evidence as a ‘gold standard’ about ‘where you really come from’ involves a remediation of cultural and archival memory, in the construction of a ‘usable past’. This article is based on initial questionnaire data from a preliminary study of those attending DNA collection sessions in northern England. It presents some early indicators of the perceived importance of being of Viking descent among participants, notes some emerging patterns and considers the implications for contemporary debates on migration, belonging and local and national identity.
    Keywords
    Collective memory
    Indigenism
    Migration
    National identity
    Popular history
    Popular science
    Population genetics
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Sage
    License URI
    http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0038038513493538
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2245
    ISSN
    0038-0385
    Collections
    • Psychology (Peer-reviewed publications)

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