“A stunning achievement in archival research, this great book eagerly undercuts many myths about reformist politics in the Progressive Era and the New Deal.”—John McKiernan-GonzÁlez, author of <i>Fevered Measures: Public Health and Race at the Texas-Mexico Border, 1848–1942</i><br /><br />"With its emphasis on immigration and geographical imagination, <i>The Purifying Knife</i> demonstrates, with meticulous research, how Texas eugenics was distinct from the national movement while still in full support of the scientific and social beliefs that inflamed Americans’ paradoxical quest for better breeding."—Elizabeth Catte, author of <i>Pure America: Eugenics and the Making of Modern Virginia </i>and <i>What You Are Getting Wrong about Appalachia</i>
From the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries, Americans embraced eugenics. Yet the Texas legislature ultimately rejected nine of ten laws advocated by the state’s eugenicists and their predecessors. Phillips and Friauf trace this unlikely resistance to a variety of influences: wealthy cotton growers concerned that the anti-immigrant politics of the eugenics movement would deprive them of a source of easily exploitable labor; a populist distrust of higher education and the academic elites who enthusiastically supported the eugenics movement; and the forces of anti-Darwinist fundamentalism and pre-millennial dispensationalism in the 1920s, among others. The Purifying Knife also details how eugenical ideas survived long past their decline in the 1940s and have entered a disturbing afterlife in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
A thoroughgoing look into a rare case where the eugenics movement “failed” in spite of its power in the United States and around the world—while still wielding a toxic influence—Phillips and Friauf’s work offers insight into the history of the LGBTQ community, abortion, and immigration policies in Texas, and persuasively argues that the long arc of eugenics history has helped shaped contemporary politics in the Lone Star State.
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Michael Phillips teaches history at the University of North Texas and is author of White Metropolis: Race, Ethnicity, and Religion in Dallas, 1841–2001.Betsy Friauf is an independent scholar.