Eugenics, literature and culture in post-war Britain
Eugenics, literature and culture in post-war Britain
This book explores eugenics in its wider social context and in literary representations in post-war Britain. Drawing on a wide range of sources in medicine, social and educational policy, genetics, popular science, science fiction, and literary texts, Hanson tracks the dynamic interactions between eugenic ideas across diverse cultural fields, demonstrating the strength of the eugenic imagination. Challenging assumptions that eugenics was fatally compromised by its association with Nazi atrocities, or that it petered out in the context of changed social attitudes in an egalitarian post-war society, the book demonstrates that eugenic thought not only persisted after 1945, but became more prominent. Throughout, eugenics is defined as a cultural movement, rather than more narrowly as a science, and the study is focused on its border-crossing capacity as a ‘style of thought.’ By tracing the expression of eugenic ideas across disciplinary boundaries and in both high and low culture, this book demonstrates the powerful and pervasive influence of eugenics in the post-war years. Authors visited include Raymond Williams, John Braine, Agatha Christie, Muriel Spark, Anthony Burgess, Doris Lessing, and J.G. Ballard.
9780415806985
Hanson, Clare
4be8b499-6221-4df0-a8ef-e12414422fa5
10 August 2012
Hanson, Clare
4be8b499-6221-4df0-a8ef-e12414422fa5
Hanson, Clare
(2012)
Eugenics, literature and culture in post-war Britain
(Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature),
Abingdon, GB.
Routledge, 190pp.
Abstract
This book explores eugenics in its wider social context and in literary representations in post-war Britain. Drawing on a wide range of sources in medicine, social and educational policy, genetics, popular science, science fiction, and literary texts, Hanson tracks the dynamic interactions between eugenic ideas across diverse cultural fields, demonstrating the strength of the eugenic imagination. Challenging assumptions that eugenics was fatally compromised by its association with Nazi atrocities, or that it petered out in the context of changed social attitudes in an egalitarian post-war society, the book demonstrates that eugenic thought not only persisted after 1945, but became more prominent. Throughout, eugenics is defined as a cultural movement, rather than more narrowly as a science, and the study is focused on its border-crossing capacity as a ‘style of thought.’ By tracing the expression of eugenic ideas across disciplinary boundaries and in both high and low culture, this book demonstrates the powerful and pervasive influence of eugenics in the post-war years. Authors visited include Raymond Williams, John Braine, Agatha Christie, Muriel Spark, Anthony Burgess, Doris Lessing, and J.G. Ballard.
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Published date: 10 August 2012
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English
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Local EPrints ID: 336525
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/336525
ISBN: 9780415806985
PURE UUID: a178929c-ef7f-43d5-a4b8-1d25fd7b03c9
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Date deposited: 28 Mar 2012 13:16
Last modified: 16 Dec 2022 02:40
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