ISBN:
9781108499491
,
9781108730747
Language:
English
Pages:
xiii, 268 Seiten
,
Illustrationen
,
24 cm
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
DDC:
305.800943/0904
Keywords:
Mendel, Gregor Influence
;
Mendel, Gregor
;
Geschichte 1900-1948
;
Eugenics History 20th century
;
Mendel's law
;
Involuntary sterilization History 20th century
;
Racism History 20th century
;
Zwangssterilisation
;
Rezeption
;
Eugenik
;
Genetik
;
Rassenhygiene
;
Germany Race relations
;
Germany Politics and government 20th century
;
Deutschland
;
Mendel, Gregor 1822-1884
;
Genetik
;
Rezeption
;
Deutschland
;
Eugenik
;
Rassenhygiene
;
Zwangssterilisation
;
Geschichte 1900-1948
Abstract:
Mendel's laws and their application to humans, 1865-1913 -- Mendelism maturing : from experimental to interpretative framework, 1913-1933 -- Mendelism, purity and national renewal -- Annihilating defective genes : Mendelian consciousness and the sterilization campaign -- Mendelizing the sterilization law -- Mendelizing racial antisemitism -- Epilogue: Social mendelism beyond the Nazis
Abstract:
"Who was the scientific progenitor of eugenic thought? Amir Teicher challenges the preoccupation with Darwin's eugenic legacy by uncovering the extent to which Gregor Mendel's theory of heredity became crucial in the formation - and radicalization - of eugenic ideas. Through a compelling analysis of the entrenchment of genetic thinking in the social and political policies in Germany between 1900 and 1948, Teicher exposes how Mendelian heredity became saturated with cultural meaning, fed racial anxieties, reshaped the ideal of the purification of the German national body and ultimately defined eugenic programs. Drawing on scientific manuscripts and memoirs, bureaucratic correspondence, court records, school notebooks, and Hitler's table talk as well as popular plays and films, Social Mendelism presents a new paradigm for understanding links between genetics and racism, and between biological and social thought"--
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index
URL:
https://ub.unibas.ch/tox/IDSBB/007176549/PDF
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