1st Edition

Heredity, Race, and the Birth of the Modern

By Sara Eigen Figal Copyright 2008
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book places under sustained scrutiny some of our most basic modern assumptions about inheritance, genealogy, blood relations, and racial categories. It has at its core a deceptively simple question, one too often taken for granted: what constitutes "good" bonds among humans, and what compels us to determine them so across generations as both a physical and a metaphysical attribute? Answering this question is complex and involves a foray into a seemingly disparate array of early modern sources: from adages, common law, and literature about bloodlines and bastardy to philosophical, political, and scientific discourses that both confirm and confound the "common sense" of familial, communal, national, and racial identity.

     

     

     

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction: Generating the Good

    Chapter One: Legal Fictions of Genealogy

    Chapter Two: Mothers Have Animals, Fathers Have Heirs

    Chapter Three: Questions of Kind: A Human Species

    Chapter Four: Questions of Kind: (family) Race (species)

    Chapter Five: Genealogical Purification

    Chapter Six: Medical Police and Hybridization

    Chapter Seven: Literary Insight: Brotherhood, the End of Tolerance

    Postscript: Heredity’s Time

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

    Biography

    Sara Eigen Figal is on the faculty of the German Department at Vanderbilt University. She is co-editor (with Mark Larrimore) of The German Invention of Race, a collection of essays on eighteenth-century science, philosophy, political theory, and literature, published with SUNY Press.

    "This book offers a great deal of valuable research and discussion material." -- L.L. Lovern, Valdosta State University