Article ID: CBB001551286

Sinanthropus in Britain: Human Origins and International Science, 1920--1939 (2015)

unapi

The Peking Man fossils discovered at Zhoukoudian in north-east China in the 1920s and 1930s were some of the most extensive palaeoanthropological finds of the twentieth century. This article examines their publicization and discussion in Britain, where they were engaged with by some of the world's leading authorities in human evolution, and a media and public highly interested in human-origins research. This international link -- simultaneously promoted by scientists in China and in Britain itself -- reflected wider debates on international networks; the role of science in the modern world; and changing definitions of race, progress and human nature. This article illustrates how human-origins research was an important means of binding these areas together and presenting scientific work as simultaneously authoritative and credible, but also evoking mystery and adventurousness. Examining this illustrates important features of contemporary views of both science and human development, showing not only the complexities of contemporary regard for the international and public dynamics of scientific research, but wider concerns over human nature, which oscillated between optimistic notions of unity and progress and pessimistic ones of essential differences and misdirected development.

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Authors & Contributors
Harris, James J.
Herschthal, Eric
Juzda, E
Blanckaert, Claude
White, Paul S.
Tilley, Helen
Journals
Studies in History of Biology
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Slagmark
Revue d'Histoire des Sciences
Nuncius: Annali di Storia della Scienza
Journal of World History
Publishers
University of Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Yale University Press
University of Chicago Press
Liverpool University Press
Berghahn Books
Baylor University Press
Concepts
Science and race
Anthropology
Evolution
Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
Progress, ideas of
Human remains
People
Huxley, Thomas Henry
Darwin, Charles Robert
Wallace, Alfred Russel
Sima, Qian
Quatrefages de Bréau, Jean Louis Armand de
Latham, R. G. (Robert Gordon)
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century, late
20th century
Early modern
Modern
Places
Great Britain
United States
China
Germany
Africa
England
Institutions
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris
Crystal Palace
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