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- W2487955247 abstract "An editorial in the March 1911 issue of American Breeder’s Magazine,1 a journal pioneering research in the new science of heredity and eugenics, addressed the issue of the confluence of the newly emerging feminist movement and eugenics. It praised the activity of women geared toward transforming their position in the public sphere and viewed it as “a part of evolution in the adjustment of women in the vocations.”2 It endorsed the female revolt against “such discriminations as a lower scale of wage for the same service as given to men, the prohibition of the right of the ballot, the ownership of too large a proportion of the property by men and unequal rights at law.”3 The basis of the support sprang from the conviction that “motherhood is worthy of larger rewards”4 and thus the female reproductive role should be given its due recognition in the public sphere as well. The editorial bewailed social practices and discourses that diminished the potential of women, stifled their development and led them to curb their procreation:The ideals of our time—too often promulgated by our schools—which should serve future generations as well as present generations, have led our women to disregard to too great extent social values, racial duties, and racial opportunities … The philosophy of our times has rather encouraged bright women to choose a successful line of employment, or to repose in the “fine art of idleness” in parental houses, or to lead lives of married sterility. Those able financially, physically, and morally to produce the best children so as to bring up racial average have been rather content that their sisters with less of material wealth, often not strong physically, and sometimes with lower moral ideals should produce a larger percentage of youth. It would seem that the relatively lower birthrate in the families of the more effective persons, as compared with the higher birthrate of those whose average efficiency is lower than the normal, is on the whole carrying the network of descent, of the nation as a whole, to lower rather than to higher levels.5" @default.
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- W2487955247 date "2015-01-01" @default.
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- W2487955247 title "Eugenic Strands in the Gynaecocentric Criticism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman" @default.
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- W2487955247 doi "https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137545794_5" @default.
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