Article ID: CBB001022644

What Does It Mean to Go Public? The American Response to Lysenkoism, Reconsidered (2010)

unapi

The American response to Lysenkoism took place at a crucial moment in the evolving relationship between science and the public. Like many professional scientific organizations in the early Cold War, the Genetics Society of America (GSA) resisted involvement in political issues. In contrast to similar societies in the physical sciences, however, the geneticists' silence cannot be explained solely by the fear of financial or political repercussions. Rather, the GSA's reluctance to engage in political discussion reflected an ongoing debate within the scientific community on the proper role for professional societies in political controversy. Those geneticists who did become embroiled in the controversy did so as individuals rather than as emissaries of the profession. Geneticists H. J. Muller, L. C. Dunn, and Theodosius Dobzhansky attempted to reach the public through a variety of outlets, including books, magazines, newspapers, and the radio, but their interventions were shaped by their individual personal and political commitments. The GSA, in contrast, attempted to combat the spread of Lysenkoism with the help of a public relations firm and a Golden Jubilee celebration of the rediscovery of Mendel's laws. The messy story of the American response to the Lysenko crisis demonstrates the limits of scientists' political involvement during the early Cold War.

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Authors & Contributors
Roll-Hansen, Nils
Gormley, Melinda
de Jong-Lambert, William
Teicher, Amir
Wolfe, Audra Jayne
Soyfer, Valery N.
Concepts
Genetics
Science and politics
Cold War
Biology
Science and ideology
Mendelism
Time Periods
20th century
20th century, late
20th century, early
21st century
19th century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
Great Britain
Moscow (Russia)
Poland
Japan
Institutions
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Partial Test Ban Treaty; Limited Test Ban Treaty (1963)
Genetics Society of America
UNESCO
Rockefeller Foundation
Columbia University (New York City)
Cambridge University
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