後期ヴィクトリア朝人における愛と優生学:科学、小説、フェミニズム<br>Love and Eugenics in the Late Nineteenth Century : Rational Reproduction and the New Woman

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後期ヴィクトリア朝人における愛と優生学:科学、小説、フェミニズム
Love and Eugenics in the Late Nineteenth Century : Rational Reproduction and the New Woman

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 276 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780198187004
  • DDC分類 823.809356

基本説明

New in paperback. Hardcover was published in 2003. Set in motion by Darwin's Origin of Species, and developed by his cousin Galton, eugenics - the science of human selective breeding - became an integral part of the Victorian frame of mind.

Full Description

The idea of eugenics - human selective breeding - originated in Victorian Britain in response to the urban poor. Darwin's evolutionary theory had laid the foundations for eugenics, replacing paradise with primordial slime. Man had not fallen from Grace, but risen from the swamps. And, as architect of his own destiny, he might rise still further. Eugenics was developed by Darwin's cousin Francis Galton in the 1860s. Embracing the idea of evolution, eugenists argued that through the judicious control of human reproduction, and the numerical increase of the middle class, Britain's supremacy in the world could be maintained. Born and bred among the competitive Victorian middle class, eugenics was a biologistic discourse on class. Aiming at 'racial improvement' by altering the balance of class in society, it was, Galton argued, 'practical Darwinism'. Eugenics found its most sustained expression in fiction and the periodical press, and was central to late nineteenth-century ideas on social progress, forming part of the debate between hereditarians and environmentalists that peaked in the closing years of the century. Even Gladstone had his vital statistics measured in Galton's eugenic laboratory. Among the champions of eugenics were social purity feminists and New Women, writers such as George Egerton, Ellice Hopkins, and Sarah Grand, who argued that women were naturally - biologically - moral, and that through rational reproduction middle-class women could regenerate the British imperial race. The New Woman has been the subject of numerous recent critical works. However, the oppressive ideas that coexisted with the mancipatory theories of some New Women - ideas that were supremely class conscious - remain largely unexamined, as the focus remains on her more progressive aspects. Love and Eugenics in the Late Nineteenth Century recontextualizes New Woman writers, demonstrating that they were as concerned with the questions of poverty, sickness and health as they were with the changing role of women, the issue for which they are currently generally known and celebrated. Focusing on fiction and the press, and drawing on the papers and published work of Galton and other eugenists, Angelique Richardson reveals the cultural pervasiveness of eugenics and explores, for the first time, the intimate relations between early feminism and eugenics, and making a radical contribution to nineteenth-century studies.

Contents

List of illustrations ; Preamble ; 1. Introduction ; 2. Women and Nature ; 3. Charity and Citizenship ; 4. Science and Love ; 5. Sarah Grand and Eugenic Love ; 6. Sarah Grand, the Country and the City ; 7. George Egerton and Eugenic Morality ; 8. Mona Caird: Individualism and the Challenge to Eugenics ; Afterword ; Select Bibliography ; Index