All in the family

Henry Louis Gates Jr.’s New Yorker advertorial. Plus, Chuck turner goes all Chuck Norris.
By ADAM REILLY  |  December 8, 2008

081205_turner_main
FLIPPING THE SCRIPT: Chuck Turner challenges the media after his arrest.

The December 1 New Yorker featured a five-page story by Henry Louis Gates Jr., director of Harvard’s W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research and editor in chief of the African-American news site the Root, on his efforts to use DNA testing to clarify his ancestry. Gates had long believed that one of his great-great grandfathers was a white man, Samuel Brady, who had owned Gates’s great-great grandmother, Jane Gates, and fathered her children. In 2005, Gates began searching for living male relatives of Brady who’d be willing to have their DNA tested. He found two — and learned, subsequently, that Brady was not the father of Jane Gates’s children.

In the story — “Family Matters: When science clashes with ancestral lore” — Gates described his frustration at this abiding lacuna in his genealogy. But his focus, instead, was the power and potential of DNA testing for African-Americans. “[G]enetics can now demolish or affirm a family’s most cherished beliefs and stories with just a bit of saliva and a cotton swab,” Gates marveled. He continued:

With a little patience, and a lot of luck, perhaps DNA can solve the last remaining mystery in the Gates family line, the secret that Jane Gates took with her to her grave.

African-American history is a young discipline; restoring the branches of even one black-family tree can profoundly change our understanding of the larger story of who the African-American people really are. By telling and retelling the story of our ancestors, we can move that history from our kitchens and parlors into the textbooks, ultimately changing the official narrative of American history itself.

This is deep, emotionally fraught material. But from a journalistic point of view, it’s also problematic — because Gates happens to be the co-founder of AfricanDNA, which specializes in the sort of testing he’s extolling here. The most inexpensive options at AfricanDNA are the basic paternal- and maternal-lineage tests, which retail for just $189; four other tests are also available, including the combined genealogy report and paternal-/maternal-lineage test, which costs a robust $1277.

This doesn’t mean that Gates shouldn’t write about the implications of DNA testing for the black community. In fact, between his status as a preeminent scholar of the African-American experience and his intimate knowledge of DNA testing, he’s uniquely equipped to discuss the subject. The key, obviously, is finding a graceful way to acknowledge Gates’s clear commercial interest in the technology in question as he does so.

The Washington Post Company, which publishes the Root, seems to grasp this. Click on the “Test Your DNA” link on the Root’s home page, and the following disclosure immediately pops up: “Though theroot.com has a business relationship with africandna.com, which was co-founded by Henry Louis Gates Jr., there are many other companies that offer DNA-testing services.” Five competitor URLs follow.

In an e-mail to the Phoenix, Gates said his New Yorker piece didn’t mention AfricanDNA “because it did no testing for any result that I discussed in the essay. In fact, the company didn’t exist during any of the testing or filming of my two PBS series [African American Lives and African American Lives 2]. And in any future series, africandna.com will not be involved in any genetic testing for the program.”

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
  Topics: Media -- Dont Quote Me , Barack Obama, Salvatore DiMasi, Media,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY ADAM REILLY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BULLY FOR BU!  |  March 12, 2010
    After six years at the Phoenix , I recently got my first pre-emptive libel threat. It came, most unexpectedly, from an investigative reporter. And beyond the fact that this struck me as a blatant attempt at intimidation, it demonstrated how tricky journalism's new, collaboration-driven future could be.
  •   STOP THE QUINN-SANITY!  |  March 03, 2010
    The year is still young, but when the time comes to look back at 2010's media lowlights, the embarrassing demise of Sally Quinn's Washington Post column, "The Party," will almost certainly rank near the top of the list.
  •   RIGHT CLICK  |  February 19, 2010
    Back in February 2007, a few months after a political neophyte named Deval Patrick cruised to victory in the Massachusetts governor's race with help from a political blog named Blue Mass Group (BMG) — which whipped up pro-Patrick sentiment while aggressively rebutting the governor-to-be's critics — I sized up a recent conservative entry in the local blogosphere.
  •   RANSOM NOTES  |  February 12, 2010
    While reporting from Afghanistan two years ago, David Rohde became, for the second time in his career, an unwilling participant rather than an observer. On October 29, 1995, Rohde had been arrested by Bosnian Serbs. And then in November 2008, Rohde and two Afghan colleagues were en route to an interview with a Taliban commander when they were kidnapped.
  •   POOR RECEPTION  |  February 08, 2010
    The right loves to rant against the "liberal-media elite," but there's one key media sector where the conservative id reigns supreme: talk radio.

 See all articles by: ADAM REILLY