
Breeding Better Vermonters
The Eugenics Project in the Green Mountain State
Nancy L. Gallagher
(Author)21,000+ Reviews
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Description
Eugenics -- the study of human racial progress through selective breeding -- frequently invokes images of social engineering, virulent racism, immigrant persecution, and Nazi genocide, but Vermont's little known adventure in eugenics shows the inherent adaptability of eugenics theory and methods to parochial social justice. Beginning with genealogies of Vermont's rural poor in the 1920s, and concluding in the 1930s with an exposé of ethnic prejudice in Vermont's largest city, this story of the Eugenics Survey of Vermont explores the scope, limits, and changing interpretations of eugenics in America and offers a new approach to the history of progressive politics and social reform in New England. Inspired and directed by Zoology Professor Henry F. Perkins, the survey, through social research, political agitation, and education campaigns, infused eugenic agendas into progressive programs for child welfare, mental health, and rural community development. Breeding Better Vermonters examines social, ethnic, and religious tensions and reveals how population studies, theories of human heredity, and a rhetoric of altruism became subtle, yet powerful tools of social control and exclusion in a state whose motto was "freedom and unity."
Product Details
Publisher | University Press of New England |
Publish Date | August 01, 1999 |
Pages | 253 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780874519525 |
Dimensions | 9.1 X 6.0 X 0.8 inches | 0.9 pounds |
About the Author
NANCY L. GALLAGHER completed graduate work in history at the University of Vermont.
Reviews
"Those involved today in genetic engineering--designed to eliminate genes that produce certain diseases--might do well to consider the eugenics experience that occupied many Vermonters and others in the 1920s and early 1930s. The movement was thoroughly researched in Breeding Better Vermonters, by Nancy L. Gallagher, published in 1999 by the University Press of New England."-- "Bennington Banner"
Those involved today in genetic engineering designed to eliminate genes that produce certain diseases might do well to consider the eugenics experience that occupied many Vermonters and others in the 1920s and early 1930s. The movement was thoroughly researched in Breeding Better Vermonters, by Nancy L. Gallagher, published in 1999 by the University Press of New England. Bennington Banner"
"Those involved today in genetic engineering -- designed to eliminate genes that produce certain diseases -- might do well to consider the eugenics experience that occupied many Vermonters and others in the 1920s and early 1930s. The movement was thoroughly researched in Breeding Better Vermonters, by Nancy L. Gallagher, published in 1999 by the University Press of New England. "Bennington Banner""
Bennington Banner"
Those involved today in genetic engineering designed to eliminate genes that produce certain diseases might do well to consider the eugenics experience that occupied many Vermonters and others in the 1920s and early 1930s. The movement was thoroughly researched in Breeding Better Vermonters, by Nancy L. Gallagher, published in 1999 by the University Press of New England. Bennington Banner"
"Those involved today in genetic engineering -- designed to eliminate genes that produce certain diseases -- might do well to consider the eugenics experience that occupied many Vermonters and others in the 1920s and early 1930s. The movement was thoroughly researched in Breeding Better Vermonters, by Nancy L. Gallagher, published in 1999 by the University Press of New England. "Bennington Banner""
Bennington Banner"
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