Healing Society: Medical Language in American Eugenics

Science in Context 8 (1):175-196 (1995)
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Abstract

The ArgumentAmerican eugenics developed out of a cultural tradition independent of medicine. However, the eugenicist Harry Hamilton Laughlin and some legal experts involved in eugenic practice in the United States used medical language in discussing and evaluating enforced eugenic sterilizations. They built on medicine as a model for healing, while at the same time playing down medicine's concern with its traditional client: the individual patient. Laughlin's attitude toward medicine was ambivalent because he wanted expert eugenicists, rather than medical experts, to control eugenic practice. In contrast, legal experts saw eugenics as an integral part of medicine, though one expert challenged basing the judicial system on eugenically minded medicine. All in all, the medicalization of American eugenics involved expanding the scope of medicine to include the mutilation of individuals for the benefit of society. The judicial system was medicalized in that an expanded medicine became the basis of legislation in the thirty states that permitted eugenic sterilizations.

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Citations of this work

Can we learn from eugenics?D. Wikler - 1999 - Journal of Medical Ethics 25 (2):183-194.
American Eugenics and the Nazis: Recent Historiography.Paul Crook - 2002 - The European Legacy 7 (3):363-381.
Eugenics — Medical or Social Science?Peter Weingart - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (1):197-207.
Eugenic Values.Daniel Wilker - 1998 - Science in Context 11 (3-4):455-470.

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