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Discovering Your Roots

By: John Philip Colletta, The Great Courses
Narrated by: John Philip Colletta
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Summary

Genealogy is a journey of self-discovery that can teach you as much about yourself as about those who came before you. But there's an obstacle that holds many of us back from unearthing our family history: uncertainty about how to go about it. With Dr. Colletta's 15 lectures, you'll learn the same skills and methodologies the experts use to solve genealogical mysteries, to create compelling nonfiction narratives, and to uncover information from the long-forgotten past in the most effective ways possible.

These lectures provide you with smart and savvy ways to find-and use-the most helpful online and print resources available today, including U.S. population censuses, the Periodical Source Index (PERSI), and the National Archives and Records Administration. You'll also learn tools of the trade for working with these and other sources, as well as countless tips for making your own research more useful.

You'll also discover how to write engaging historical narratives that can inform and entertain family members or general audiences. You'll explore seven steps for personalizing biographical facts; specific ways to construct and narrate the timeline of an ancestor from birth to death; four fundamental questions you need answers to before you start writing about your ancestors; and more.

So grab that old photograph, sit down with an elderly relative, comb through old records, and prepare to embark on a personal adventure that can dramatically reshape how you think about your past - and yourself.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2014 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2014 The Great Courses
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For Americans with European ancestry

It was well laid out, in reasonable chunks and easy to follow.

However, it was a complete whitewash of American genealogy and history. enslaved people are mentioned once, as an off hand comment about not being named on early censuses.

No advice is given on how to go about researching enslaved American ancestors. No mention even of how to record information on the slaves your European descended ancestors kept.

The lecturer knows a lot about his ancestors who had a cotton plantation, but never once says how many people were enslaved on it or any details of those slaves. It's an utterly blinkered view of American history and genealogy and I would expect far better from genealogists and historians. We tell the stories of the past in their entirety, and to do so is both a privilege and a responsibility.

I don't know what this was recorded but both the whitewashing and the online resources seem quite outdated.

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