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      Remediating Viking Origins: Genetic Code as Archival Memory of the Remote Past

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          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.

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          Genetics. The science and business of genetic ancestry testing.

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            What's in a name? Y chromosomes, surnames and the genetic genealogy revolution.

            Heritable surnames are highly diverse cultural markers of coancestry in human populations. A patrilineal surname is inherited in the same way as the non-recombining region of the Y chromosome and there should, therefore, be a correlation between the two. Studies of Y haplotypes within surnames, mostly of the British Isles, reveal high levels of coancestry among surname cohorts and the influence of confounding factors, including multiple founders for names, non-paternities and genetic drift. Combining molecular genetics and surname analysis illuminates population structure and history, has potential applications in forensic studies and, in the form of 'genetic genealogy', is an area of rapidly growing interest for the public.
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              Founders, Drift, and Infidelity: The Relationship between Y Chromosome Diversity and Patrilineal Surnames

              Most heritable surnames, like Y chromosomes, are passed from father to son. These unique cultural markers of coancestry might therefore have a genetic correlate in shared Y chromosome types among men sharing surnames, although the link could be affected by mutation, multiple foundation for names, nonpaternity, and genetic drift. Here, we demonstrate through an analysis of 1,678 Y-chromosomal haplotypes within 40 British surnames a remarkably high degree of coancestry that generally increases as surnames become rarer. On average, the proportion of haplotypes lying within descent clusters is 62% but ranges from 0% to 87%. The shallow time depth of many descent clusters within names, the lack of a detectable effect of surname derivation on diversity, and simulations of surname descent suggest that genetic drift through variation in reproductive success is important in structuring haplotype diversity. Modern patterns therefore provide little reliable information about the original founders of surnames some 700 years ago. A comparative analysis of published data on Y diversity within Irish surnames demonstrates a relative lack of surname frequency dependence of coancestry, a difference probably mediated through distinct Irish and British demographic histories including even more marked genetic drift in Ireland.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Sociology
                Sociology
                SOC
                spsoc
                Sociology
                SAGE Publications (Sage UK: London, England )
                0038-0385
                1469-8684
                October 2013
                October 2013
                : 47
                : 5 , Special Issue: Genetics and the Sociology of Identity
                : 921-938
                Affiliations
                [1-0038038513493538]University of Leicester, UK
                [2-0038038513493538]University of Leicester, UK
                [3-0038038513493538]University of Leicester, UK
                Author notes
                [*]Marc Scully, Department of Historical Studies, University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK. Email: ms627@ 123456le.ac.uk
                Article
                10.1177_0038038513493538
                10.1177/0038038513493538
                3807801
                24179286
                9110c7c5-296f-40dd-8725-14549facc4b2
                © The Author(s) 2013

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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                collective memory,indigenism,migration,national identity,popular history,popular science,population genetics

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