Show
763 citations
related to Eugenics
Show
763 citations
related to Eugenics as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Elise Smith
(2020)
“Why do we measure mankind?” Marketing anthropometry in late-Victorian Britain.
History of Science
(pp. 142-165).
(/isis/citation/CBB717605789/)
Multimedia Object
Lee Pierce; Jay Timothy Dolmage
(2020)
Jay Timothy Dolmage, “Disabled Upon Arrival: Eugenics, Immigration, and the Construction of Race” (OSU Press, 2018).
New Books Network Podcast.
(/isis/citation/CBB842090920/)
Article
Yoram Mouchenik; Véronique Fau-Vincenti
(2020)
The fate of Jews hospitalized in mental hospitals in France during World War II.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 178-193).
(/isis/citation/CBB408541862/)
Book
Marion Andrea Schmidt
(2020)
Eradicating deafness?: Genetics, pathology, and diversity in twentieth-century America.
(/isis/citation/CBB370208665/)
Book
Mab Segrest
(2020)
Administrations of Lunacy: Racism and the Haunting of American Psychiatry at the Milledgeville Asylum.
(/isis/citation/CBB644941122/)
Multimedia Object
Craig Sorvillo; Kravetz, Melissa
(2020)
Melissa Kravetz, “Women Doctors in Weimar and Nazi Germany: Maternalism, Eugenics and Professional Identity” (U Toronto Press, 2019).
New Books Network Podcast.
(/isis/citation/CBB872720029/)
Book
Edith Sheffer
(2020)
Asperger's Children: The Origins of Autism in Nazi Vienna.
(/isis/citation/CBB845681471/)
Article
Birgit Braun
(2020)
Person and ethics of a psychiatrist during National Socialism: Friedrich Meggendorfer (1880–1953).
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 93-104).
(/isis/citation/CBB172692386/)
Article
Chiara Beccalossi
(2020)
Optimizing and Normalizing the Population Through Hormone Therapies in Italian Science, c. 1926–1950.
British Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 67-88).
(/isis/citation/CBB899140218/)
Article
Filippo Maria Sposini
(2020)
At the Borders of the Average Man: Adolphe Quêtelet on Mental, Moral, and Criminal Monstrosities.
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
(pp. 201-217).
(/isis/citation/CBB294903530/)
Book
Frank W. Stahnisch; Erna Kurbegović
(2020)
Psychiatry and the Legacies of Eugenics: Historical Studies of Alberta and Beyond.
(/isis/citation/CBB186129418/)
Article
Cassia Roth
(2020)
The Degenerating Sex: Female Sterilisation, Medical Authority and Racial Purity in Catholic Brazil.
Medical History
(pp. 173-194).
(/isis/citation/CBB353485138/)
Article
Jessica Lee Mathiason
(2020)
From Sentimentality to Science: Social Utility, Feminist Eugenics and The End of The Road in Progressive Era America.
Gender and History
(pp. 149-168).
(/isis/citation/CBB916148769/)
Book
Mariella Mehr; Emmanuel Betta
(2020)
Uomini e topi: Eugenetica in democrazia.
(/isis/citation/CBB461373324/)
Book
Jenny Bangham
(2020)
Blood Relations: Transfusion and the Making of Human Genetics.
(/isis/citation/CBB189983505/)
Article
Hansun Hsiung
(2019)
Whose Science Wins or Loses? (And What’s Left for Reason After?).
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
(pp. 770-774).
(/isis/citation/CBB031466314/)
Book
Paul-André Rosental
(2019)
A Human Garden: French Policy and the Transatlantic Legacies of Eugenic Experimentation.
(/isis/citation/CBB340383557/)
Article
Hyun, Jaehwan
(December 2019)
Racializing Chōsenjin: Science and Biological Speculations in Colonial Korea.
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
(pp. 489-510).
(/isis/citation/CBB774352848/)
Article
Ann Marie Ryan
(2019)
Catholic Minds/Bodies–Souls: Catholic Schools and Eugenic Inspired Educational Reforms in the United States, 1915–1952.
History of Education
(pp. 466-478).
(/isis/citation/CBB756510954/)
Book
Melissa Kravetz
(2019)
Women Doctors in Weimar and Nazi Germany: Maternalism, Eugenics, and Professional Identity.
(/isis/citation/CBB853734926/)
Be the first to comment!