Article ID: CBB000651025

Dermatoglyphics and the Persistence of “Mongolism”: Networks of Technology, Disease and Discipline (2003)

unapi

In 1961, a prestigious group of medical researchers called on their colleagues to stop using the language of 'Mongolism' to describe people with what we now call 'Down's syndrome' (or Trisomy 21). This call responded to new knowledge about the biological basis of Down's syndrome: rather than the product of racial degeneration, as had been hypothesized in the 19th century, the condition was the result of an extra chromosome, dubbed '21'. Yet, despite this plea, the terms 'Mongol' and 'Mongolism' continued in scientific use through the 1960s. Drawing on published and archival materials, I argue that the new knowledge about chromosomes did not rupture older patterns of scientific practice or interpretation, and with them, older terminological habits. The persistence of the language of Mongolism reflects the continuity of a network of older approaches to interpreting the condition within the community of human and medical geneticists, including an enduring diagnostic and interpretive technology, dermatoglyphics. Old networks were not supplanted; they were re-aligned.

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Description On the use of this older term for Down syndrome and its ramifications for diagnosis and theoretical understanding of the disease.


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Authors & Contributors
Sonia Colafrancesco
Ingram, Hannah
Zavestoski, Stephen
Yildirim, Gazi
Wright, David
Winance, Myriam
Journals
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Asclepio: Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de la Medicina
Social Studies of Science
Social Science History
Social History of Medicine
Science, Technology and Human Values
Publishers
Rowman & Littlefield
Oxford University Press
Edizioni dell'Orso
Concepts
Medicine
Disease and diseases
Terminology and nomenclature
Down syndrome
Diagnosis
Disabilities; disability; accessibility
People
Down, John Langdon Haydon
Berengario da Carpi, Jacopo
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
19th century
Renaissance
Medieval
Places
United States
England
Argentina
Spain
Germany
France
Institutions
World Health Organization (WHO)
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