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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Minneapolis, London : University of Minnesota Press
    UID:
    b3kat_BV043334821
    Format: 354 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    ISBN: 9780816673025 , 9780816673032
    Content: "From the 'gay gene' to the 'female brain' and African American students' insufficient 'hereditary background' for higher education, arguments about a biological basis for human difference have reemerged in the twenty-first century. Measuring Manhood shows where they got their start. Melissa N. Stein analyzes how race became the purview of science in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century America and how it was constructed as a biological phenomenon with far-reaching social, cultural, and political resonances. She tells of scientific 'experts' who advised the nation on its most pressing issues and exposes their use of gender and sex differences to conceptualize or buttress their claims about racial difference. Stein examines the works of scientists and scholars from medicine, biology, ethnology, and other fields to trace how their conclusions about human difference did no less than to legitimize sociopolitical hierarchy in the United States. Covering a wide range of historical actors from Samuel Morton, the infamous collector and measurer of skulls in the 1830s, to NAACP leader and antilynching activist Walter White in the 1930s, this book reveals the role of gender, sex, and sexuality in the scientific making...and unmaking...of race"...
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: USA ; Rassismus ; Sexismus ; Soziobiologie ; Geschichte
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