How Generational Sagas Inspired a Genealogy Journey

S. Zainab Williams reflects on how books like The Seven Daughters of Dupree sparked her personal ancestry research.

S. Zainab Williams, an African American and diasporic Southeast Asian woman, describes how generational sagas led her to explore her family history through DNA testing and records on Ancestry.com. She traced one branch to Richard Middleton and Elvina Crafton, her third great-grandparents, and learned details about their enslavement in 1860 Edgefield, South Carolina. Williams also shares efforts to connect with her maternal Malaysian side, including tasks for her mother to interview her 90-year-old grandmother in Singapore about Yemeni and Malayalam roots. The essay notes her appreciation for novels such as Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi and The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson as inspirations for understanding migration and lost histories.

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A new reading list spotlights ten novels exploring family histories across generations.

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Tracy Clark-Flory and Kate Schatz, both Bay Area feminist writers, recently shared insights into their new books inspired by their mothers' experiences in 1960s homes for unwed mothers. Clark-Flory's memoir 'My Mother’s Daughter' recounts her DNA reunion with a sister her mother placed for adoption, while Schatz's novel 'Where the Girls Were' fictionalizes similar isolation and secrecy. Their conversation highlights research challenges, family traumas, and joyful sibling reunions.

A new essay on Literary Hub addresses questions of indigenous identity.

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Robin Wall Kimmerer continues to inspire readers with her book Braiding Sweetgrass and her new Plant, Baby, Plant initiative.

New genetic analysis reveals close interactions between Europe's early farmers and hunter-gatherers, with women driving the spread of farming in northwestern regions. Later migrations reshaped populations as far as Britain.

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A large-scale genetic analysis has identified a previously overlooked third ancestral group in Japan, challenging the long-held dual origins theory. Researchers linked the new ancestry to the ancient Emishi people of northeastern Japan. The findings also connect archaic DNA from Neanderthals and Denisovans to modern health conditions.

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