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Breeding Contempt
Bookstore | Seasonal Catalog Book Listings | Fall and Winter 2007 Catalog | Breeding Contempt

Breeding Contempt
Breeding Contempt

Price: $34.95 

Subtitle:
The History of Coerced Sterilization in the United States
Author: Mark A. Largent
Subject: History of Medicine / American Studies
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8135-4182-2
Pages: 240 pages, 5 b&w photographs, 2 graphs, 4 tables
Publication Date: November 2007

Praise for Breeding Contempt:

“A deeply researched and richly nuanced account of the methods and motives that shaped this dark chapter in American history—and that continue to haunt contemporary debates.”—Leila Zenderland, author of Measuring Minds: Henry Herbert Goddard and the Origins of American Intelligence Testing

“Mark Largent’s account of more than a century of involvement of leading Americans in coerced sterilization movements is disturbing and provocative.”—Philip J. Pauly, author of Biologists and the Promise of American Life: From Meriwether Lewis to Alfred Kinsey


Description:

Widespread coercive sterilization programs are most closely associated with the Nazis and World War II atrocities. Less frequently are they recognized as efforts that were undertaken by American lawmakers, scientists, and health care providers. Mark A. Largent explores the history of compulsory sterilization in the United States by examining the assumptions and motivations that led to the coerced sterilization of tens of thousands of Americans during the twentieth century.
 

The book begins in the mid-nineteenth century, when American medical doctors began advocating the sterilization of citizens they deemed degenerate. By the turn of the twentieth century, physicians, biologists, and social scientists championed the cause, and lawmakers in two-thirds of the United States enacted laws that required the sterilization of various criminals, mental health patients, epileptics, and syphilitics. The movement lasted well into the latter half of the century, and Largent shows how even today the sentiments that motivated coerced sterilization persist as certain public figures advocate compulsory birth control—such as progesterone shots for male criminals or female welfare recipients—based on the same notions and prejudices that had brought about thousands of coerced sterilizations decades ago.


About the Author:

Mark A. Largent  is a historian of biology and an assistant professor of science policy and directs the Science, Technology, Environment, and Public Policy Specialization in James Madison College at Michigan State University in East Lansing.



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Price: $34.95 






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