-
https://collections.enfance-jeunesse.fr/files/original/eed3131709c961ce85fccf8c3b7e77a8
be6d9664d32d529db9a49f2763b55045
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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d314 27..52 - d314.pdf
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
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Bibliographie sur la généalogie et les pratiques généalogiques dans le monde
Description
An account of the resource
Bibliographie sur la généalogie et les pratiques généalogiques dans le monde,
réalisée dans le cadre du programme EnJeux,
sous la direction de Patrice Marcilloux, professeur d'archivistique, et Bénédicte Grailles, maîtresse de conférences en archivistique (CERHIO-Angers CNRS UMR 6258, Université d'Angers),
par Adelaïde Laloux, ingénieure d'étude,
en décembre 2015,
complétée par
Verónica Zurita, étudiante-stagiaire du master Dynamiques et actions sociales territoriales (Université d'Angers) et
Bénédicte Grailles
en février 2016
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Adelaïde Laloux
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Adélaïde Laloux
Bénédicte Grailles
Verónica Zurita
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Genealogical identities
Type
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Journal Article
Creator
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Catherine Nash
Date
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2002
Language
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en
Zotero
Title
Genealogical identities
Item Type
Journal Article
Author
Catherine Nash
URL
http://www.envplan.com/abstract.cgi?id=d314
Volume
20
Issue
1
Pages
27-52
Publication Title
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
ISSN
0263-7758, 1472-3433
Date
2002
DOI
10.1068/d314
Access Date
2015-06-26 12:28:03
Library Catalog
CrossRef
Language
en
Abstract Note
Ideas of belonging, cultural identity, and social relations based on ancestral connection, blood, and primordial kinship, have a contradictory presence in cultural theory and public culture. The search for alternatives to fixed, essentialist, and exclusive ways of imagining culture and belonging has been central to recent cultural theory and cultural geography. This has involved much attention to cultural routes, mobility, and hybridity and a critique of cultural roots, fixity, and purity in response to increasing transnational flows, the experience of displaced people, racism, and ethnic fundamentalism. Yet discourses of indigeneity and new migration patterns, as well as cultural globalisation more widely, have also prompted the growth in genealogy amongst 'settler' groups in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States who search for European, and often specifically Irish, roots. In this paper I explore the relationships between ideas of nation, ancestry, and diaspora. I focus on what happens when questions of nationality, ethnicity, and identity meet in the practice of ancestral research in Ireland, and begin to track the spatially differentiated cultural politics of genealogy. As the language of genealogy travels with Irish roots tourists and through electronic networks, the implications of genealogical practices and identifications can mutate so that what may be a politically regressive turn to ethnic purity and racial discourse in one context can, in another, productively unsettle older exclusive versions of belonging. For both individual and collective identities, genealogical projects can have unsettling results.
Attachment Title
d314 27..52 - d314.pdf
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[No URL]