



Ancestors
Identity and DNA in the Levant
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
An eye-opening investigation into ancestry and origins in the Middle East that synthesizes thousands of years of genetic history in the region to question what it means to be indigenous to any land
“Ancestors transcends geography to launch an eye-opening inquiry into the relationship of genetics and identity. It’s a transformational read for us all.”—Jason Roberts, author of Every Living Thing and A Sense of the World
In recent years, genetic testing has become easily available to consumers across the globe, making it relatively simple to find out where your ancestors came from. But what do these test results actually tell us about ourselves?
In Ancestors, Pierre Zalloua, a leading authority on population genetics, argues that these test results have led to a dangerous oversimplification of what one’s genetic heritage means. Genetic ancestry has become conflated with anthropological categories such as “origin,” “ethnicity,” and even “race” in spite of the complexities that underlie these concepts. And nowhere is this interplay more important and more controversial, Zalloua writes, than in the Levant—an ancient region known as one of the cradles of civilization and that now includes Palestine, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and parts of Turkey.
Born in Lebanon, Zalloua grew up surrounded by people for whom the question of identity was a matter of life or death. Building on years of research, he tells a rich and compelling history of the Levant through the framework of genetics that spans from one hundred thousand years ago, when humans first left Africa, to the twenty-first century and modern nation-states.
A timely, paradigm-shifting investigation into ancestry and origins in the Middle East, Ancestors ultimately reframes what it means to be indigenous to any land—urging us to reshape how we think about home, belonging, and where culture really comes from.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Geneticist Zalloua tackles the complex topic of historical heritage in this enthralling debut study of the ancient Levant. Zalloua points to the recent rise of "genetic ancestry testing kits" as a catalyst for a surge of interest in the DNA component of human history, but laments that too often "origins, ethnicities... identities, and even race are being used interchangeably with genetic ancestry with little or no attention being given to the complexities... that underlie these concepts." Population genetics should not be confused with "cultural attributes," Zalloua argues, asserting that it is culture (rituals, languages, and beliefs), not genes, that "constitute the core of someone's heritage." What DNA can effectively do instead, Zalloua contends, is challenge modern understandings of identity with "novel and sometimes shocking" glimpses of "human mobility." He begins his narrative with the earliest waves of human migration out of Africa, tracking Stone Age groups that inhabited regions of the Levant for thousands of years, becoming genetically distinctive before mixing again. He concludes with the Bronze Age, by which time, he demonstrates, the peoples of the Levant had "become so amalgamated, it is very difficult to pick them apart." Zalloua brings urgency and humanism to the technical work of genetic analysis, arguing that genes offer a portrait of a past defined by constant change, and that 21st-century humans would do well to learn from such fluidity and connection. The result is a singular blend of science and history that makes a powerful argument against present-day sectarianism and nationalism.