All My Relations Podcast

Can a DNA test make me Native American?

Mar 12, 2019
In this conversation, Dr. Kimberly Tallbear, a Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate scholar and expert on Indigenous identity, dives deep into the pitfalls of using DNA tests to claim Native ancestry. She discusses how these tests can undermine tribal sovereignty and perpetuate colonial definitions of Indigeneity. Tallbear emphasizes the importance of relational identity over genetic claims and critiques the media's portrayal of Indigenous genetics. The discussion also touches on alternatives for genuine connection, emphasizing kinship and community over mere genetic links.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Native DNA Is A Construct

  • 'Native American DNA' is a settler-colonial construct built from selective sampling and migration narratives.
  • Genetic markers labeled 'Native' reflect sampling choices, not neat tribal boundaries.
INSIGHT

Genetics Threatens Peoplehood

  • Genetic claims risk reframing indigenous nationhood as individual lineage rather than collective peoplehood.
  • That reframing threatens sovereignty by privileging settler definitions over tribal ones.
INSIGHT

Blood Quantum Is Paper, Not Physiology

  • 'Blood quantum' is a colonial-era paper fraction, not a physiological blood test.
  • Tribes exercise agency by shifting enrollment rules toward lineal descent and genealogical methods.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app