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1

Evans, June Banks. The Blackwells of Blackwell's Neck: An inferential genealogy based on material available. New Orleans, LA (Lake Marina Tower 16 BW, 300 Lake Marina Dr., New Orleans 70124-1676): Bryn Ffyliaid Publications, 1997.

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Evans, June Banks. The Blackwells of Blackwell's Neck: An inferential genealogy based on material available. New Orleans, La. (300 Lake Marina Drive, New Orleans 70124-1676): Bryn Ffyliaid Publications, 2004.

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3

Addison, D. H. A concise Bible genealogy: With gazetteer and fully indexed, based on the 1611 K.J.V. [S.l.]: D.H. Addison, 1986.

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4

Rehm, Jeffrey C. The Jeptha Wright story: Based on the genealogy collection of Louise Wright Weybright and the many family members who contributed. Franklin, NC: Genealogy Pub. Service, 1994.

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5

Chamberlain, Welton Curtiss. Richard Chamberlaine of Braintree, 1642: His Norman and English ancestors and descendants, 865-1991: a speculative genealogy highly biographical, based on historical facts and premises. Pinckney, Mich: W.C. Chamberlain, 1991.

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6

Poole, Joyce Perkerson. A Heard family record-based history: The first five generations in America. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, 2005.

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7

Munger, Donna B. Michael Springle (Sprinkle, Sprengle, Sprenkle) in Pennsylvania: An evidence based reconstruction of his life and land 1724-1831. Yelm, Washington: Brydon Research, 2012.

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8

Street, John C. An Ellis family of Devon and Newfoundland: Based on the work of C. Archer Ellis (1859-1943) of St. John's Newfoundland. Cross Plains, Wis: J.C. Street, 1994.

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9

Morgan County, Kentucky, best bits: A genealogical abstract based on the Licking Valley courier. [Mountain View, CA]: C. Cochran, 1999.

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10

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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13

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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15

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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16

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2007.

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17

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family and surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. 7th ed. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2010.

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18

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and current hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family and surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. 5th ed. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2009.

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19

Arterburn, Charles R. Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family and surname: Based on historical and genealogical sources and recent DNA analyses. 3rd ed. Lexington, Ky: C. Arterburn, 2008.

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20

Bell, Raymond Martin. The Lacock family of Washington County, Pennsylvania, with notes on the Eddy, Hughes, Leet, and Vankirk families: Based on research by Walter Byron Lacock, 1897-1974. Washington, Pa: R.M. Bell, 1986.

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21

Maldonado, Sigrid Renate. Ancestral paths: Stories of our lives based on archival records of our foreparents, also on old letters and memories. Concord, N.H: AS WAS Publishing, 2013.

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22

C, Anderson Joseph. The Duttons of Glen Rock, Malden, Massachusetts: An updated account based on Glen Rock and the Dutton girls by Claire Dutton McGregor Matz. Baltimore, MD: Otter Bay Books, 2013.

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23

Obee, Dave. British Columbia 1871: A list of residents based on the work of Edward Mallandaine. Victoria, B.C: D. Obee, 2005.

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24

Dickenson, Richard B. A genealogical/documentary perspective of Princeton Black history: Based on Reminiscences-- (1913) by Anna Bustill Smith : an annotated resource. [S.l.]: R.B. Dickenson, 2001.

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25

Dodge, Dorothy. Lytton Municipal Cemetery, Lytton, BC: Burials 1876-2005 : (transcriptions based on office records). Edited by Graham Wendy 1947-. Richmond, BC: British Columbia Genealogical Society, 2006.

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26

Medford, Robert Joseph. The families of Haywood and Jackson counties, North Carolina: Based on the 1850 census records. Alexander, NC: WorldComm, 1994.

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27

Drinkard, Mildred E. Nero. Contributions of Blacks in building Vicksburg, Mississippi and its environmental systems, 1820-1989: A resource-based planning study. Vicksburg, Miss. (819 South Street, P.O. Drawer 150, Vicksburg 39180): City Planning Dept., 1989.

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28

Newman, Roger L. The history of the Smouse family of America, 1738-2009: Based on The history of the Smouse family of America (1908) by J. Warren Smouse, and The history of the Smouse family of America, second edition (1969) by Mary Smouse Yohe. 3rd ed. Baltimore, MD: Otter Bay Books, 2009.

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29

Newman, Roger L. The history of the Smouse family of America, 1738-2009: Based on The history of the Smouse family of America (1908) by J. Warren Smouse, and The history of the Smouse family of America, second edition (1969) by Mary Smouse Yohe. 3rd ed. Baltimore, MD: Otter Bay Books, 2009.

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30

The personnel of George Rogers Clark's Fort Jefferson and the civilian community of Clarksville, Kentucky, 1780-1781: Based on the lost vouchers of George Rogers Clark. Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, Inc., 1999.

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31

Gallant, Peter. An index of Irish immigrants based on obituaries and death notices in Prince Edward Island newspapers 1835-1910. Charlottetown, P.E.I: Prince Edward Island Genealogical Society, 1990.

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32

Gallant, Peter. An index of English immigrants based on obituaries and death notices in Prince Edward Island newspapers 1835-1910. Charlottetown, P.E.I: Prince Edward Island Genealogical Society, 1991.

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33

Jones, Pei Te Hurinui. He tuhi mārei-kura: A treasury of sacred writings : a Māori account of the creation, based on the priestly lore of the Tainui people. Hamilton, N.Z: Aka & Associates, 2013.

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34

Medford, Robert Joseph. The families of Haywood County, North Carolina: Based on the 1920 census records. Alexander, NC: WorldComm, 1999.

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35

Medford, Robert Joseph. The families of Haywood County, North Carolina: Based on the 1860 census records. Alexander, NC: WorldComm, 1994.

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36

Medford, Robert Joseph. The families of Haywood County, North Carolina: Based on the 1910 census records. Alexander, NC: WorldComm, 1998.

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37

1956-, Medford Connie, ed. The families of Haywood County, North Carolina: Based on the 1810 to 1840 census records. Alexander, NC: WorldComm, 1999.

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38

Young, Patsy. Lochridge Place: Coming of Age in Southwest Arkansas, a Genealogy Based Story. don't know, 2021.

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39

Cope, Gilbert. Genealogy of Dunwoody and Hood Families : And Collateral Branches: Their History and Biography, Based Upon Original Researches. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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40

McNair, Roger. From DANIEL McNAIR to US: A history based genealogy of some of Daniel's descendants with allied lines. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2015.

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41

Cope, Gilbert. Genealogy of Dunwoody and Hood Families : And Collateral Branches: Their History and Biography, Based upon Original Researches. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2017.

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42

Some research notes and tentative hypotheses of the origin of the Arterburn family/surname: Based on Historical and Genealogical Sources and Recent DNA Analyses. Lexington, Kentucky: Charles R. Arterburn, 2010.

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43

Schor, Paul. Color and Status of Slaves. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199917853.003.0007.

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This chapter discusses how the definition of race varied over time and place and remained uncertain in cases judged by the courts in the antebellum era. In the 1850s, a claim of whiteness was an argument that could be made in court to obtain liberty, since a white person could not be a slave. Legal status did not rest on the same forms of proof as the census, but the two perspectives overlapped. Comparing the procedures for determining the legal status of slaves with the procedure adopted by the census for assigning the color of individuals shows the profound ambiguity of the latter. The language used by the legislators in 1850 and retained until the end of the century was clearly that of the scientific rules then in favor, based on the parts of black blood and of genealogy. However, in practice individuals were judged by their appearance rather than genealogy.
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44

McCutcheon, Russell T. Historicizing the Elephant in the Room. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190911966.003.0013.

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This chapter retraces the genealogy of the well-known parable of the “blind men and the elephants,” which is often cited by scholars who want to champion religious pluralism or inclusivism. While this parable is allegedly based on an ancient Indian text, this chapter shows persuasively that it is in fact a relatively modern invention used to promote a particular brand of multiculturalism and rather uncritical scholarship. As an alternative, the chapter suggests that a critical study of religions would follow Bruce Lincoln’s approach by interrogating such truth claims and situating them in their specific historical and political contexts.
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45

Hummer, Hans. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198797609.003.0012.

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The conclusion summarizes the main points of the previous ten chapters. It suggests how kinship as understood in this study can shed light on related historical problems, such as property and inheritance and the suspected dynamism of an early European economy that has traditionally been seen to be static and bounded by family rights. It situates medieval kinship within the longer history of European kinship, as a phenomenon based on a distinctive ontology predicated on the unity of humanity through sacred genealogy. In the final analysis, kinship will always defy comprehensive understanding because kinship speaks the language of intimacy rather than that of fixed structures, and its expressions continually evolve as societies generate new pathways of connectedness.
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46

Simon, Julia. Time, Tradition, Performance, and the Aesthetic Object. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190666552.003.0006.

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The final chapter addresses the temporality of a genre based on tradition. Working from conceptions of tradition gleaned from the epic and historical chronicle, and of modern anxieties about the weight of the past, reveals a resonating, vibrant, multi-temporal field for the blues that employs meta-textual references to the tradition to create ironic distance. Tracing the genealogy of a riff from Robert Johnson’s “If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day” to Muddy Waters’s “Rollin’ and Tumblin’, ” through to Nick Moss and the Flip Tops’ “The Money I Make” reveals the dynamic forms of temporal simultaneity that define the blues as a genre. An investigation of improvisation foregrounds the historical rootedness of all creative expression, while the necessary interplay between tradition and reception enables a final interrogation of the relationship between individual and community in the blues.
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47

Cohen, Antonin. Pierre Bourdieu and International Relations. Edited by Thomas Medvetz and Jeffrey J. Sallaz. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199357192.013.9.

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Over time, Pierre Bourdieu became an emergent reference in international relations—quite paradoxically, given that Bourdieu himself did not pay much attention to international relations as such. This chapter exhaustively reviews the works of Bourdieu in search of the international, both as a dimension of social capital and as a social space across societies. It then retraces how pioneering scholars used the theory and concepts of Bourdieu to develop their analysis of transnational processes. It also assesses the more recent blossoming of scholarship using Bourdieu in international relations, sometimes at the risk of inconsistency with the theory of Bourdieu. It finally suggests a coherent reconstruction of a theory of transnational fields based on Bourdieu for further research. Throughout the chapter, the notion of field serves as a golden thread to go back to its genealogy, to be found, surprisingly, in international relations.
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48

Schor, Paul. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199917853.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter provides an overview of the book’s main themes. This book examines the population categories constructed and utilized every ten years by the US census. Approaching these categories from a historical perspective rather than a strictly sociological or political one permits their analysis as sites of internal and external mobilization. It also reveals the hidden evolutions by which the contents of seemingly stable categories changed while the definitions remain the same. Long-standing categories of race, such as white or black, have varied dramatically across periods and regions. Based on distinctions of origin and status—between free and slave, white and non-white, native-born Americans and immigrants or children of immigrants—over a period of a century and a half, from the creation of the federal census in 1790 to the 1940s, this study retraces the genealogy and evolution of these categories.
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49

Barzel, Tamar. “We Began from Silence”. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190842741.003.0010.

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In the late 1970s, the Mexican ensemble Atrás del Cosmos, a pioneering free improvisation collective (1975–1983), held an eight-month residency at El Galeón, a city theater. Jazz and experimental theater were twin touchstones for the ensemble, which adapted ideas borrowed from Alejandro Jodorowsky, a Chilean expatriate known for his radical influence on the city’s 1960s theater scene, including the notion that theatrical performance should shatter social decorum and elicit liberating ways of being-in-the-world. For Atrás del Cosmos, art’s transformative potential also lay in articulating a personal voice in a collective context—a central tenet of jazz and African-American expressive culture. The ensemble’s multivalent genealogy, as well as its collaborations with US-based improvisers—notably trumpeter Don Cherry—bolster arguments for the transnational nature of twentieth-century “American” music. This chapter proposes Vijay Iyer’s notion of “embodied empathy” as a key to understanding the ensemble’s immediate social impact and its lasting historical significance.
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50

Johnson, Susan Lee. Writing Kit Carson. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469658834.001.0001.

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This critical biography braids together lives over time and space, telling tales of two white women who, in the 1960s, wrote books about the fabled frontiersman Christopher "Kit" Carson: Quantrille McClung, a Denver librarian who compiled the Carson-Bent-Boggs Genealogy, and Kansas-born but Washington, D.C.- and Chicago-based Bernice Blackwelder, a singer on stage and radio, a CIA employee, and the author of Great Westerner: The Story of Kit Carson. In the 1970s, as once-celebrated figures like Carson were falling headlong from grace, these two amateur historians kept weaving stories of western white men, including those who married American Indian and Spanish Mexican women, just as Carson had wed Singing Grass, Making Out Road, and Josefa Jaramillo. This multilayered biography reveals the nature of relationships between women historians and male historical subjects and between history buffs and professional historians. It explores the practice of history in the context of everyday life, the seductions of gender in the context of racialized power, and the strange contours of twentieth-century relationships predicated on nineteenth-century pasts. On the surface, it tells a story of lives tangled across generation and geography. Underneath run probing questions about how we know about the past and how that knowledge is shaped by the conditions of our knowing.
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