Literature DB >> 19048795

Freud's 'Lamarckism' and the politics of racial science.

Eliza Slavet1.   

Abstract

This article re-contextualizes Sigmund Freud's interest in the idea of the inheritance of acquired characteristics in terms of the socio-political connotations of Lamarckism and Darwinism in the 1930s and 1950s. Many scholars have speculated as to why Freud continued to insist on a supposedly outmoded theory of evolution in the 1930s even as he was aware that it was no longer tenable. While Freud's initial interest in the inheritance of phylogenetic memory was not necessarily politically motivated, his refusal to abandon this theory in the 1930s must be understood in terms of wider debates, especially regarding the position of the Jewish people in Germany and Austria. Freud became uneasy about the inheritance of memory not because it was scientifically disproven, but because it had become politically charged and suspiciously regarded by the Nazis as Bolshevik and Jewish. Where Freud seemed to use the idea of inherited memory as a way of universalizing his theory beyond the individual cultural milieu of his mostly Jewish patients, such a notion of universal science itself became politically charged and identified as particularly Jewish. The vexed and speculative interpretations of Freud's Lamarckism are situated as part of a larger post-War cultural reaction against Communism on the one hand (particularly in the 1950s when Lamarckism was associated with the failures of Lysenko), and on the other hand, against any scientific concepts of race in the wake of World War II.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19048795     DOI: 10.1007/s10739-007-9138-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Biol        ISSN: 0022-5010            Impact factor:   1.326


  7 in total

1.  Genetics. Was Lamarck just a little bit right?

Authors:  M Balter
Journal:  Science       Date:  2000-04-07       Impact factor: 47.728

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Journal:  Br J Hist Sci       Date:  1996-03

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Journal:  Am Hist Rev       Date:  1977-12

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Authors:  Amy Harmon
Journal:  N Y Times Web       Date:  2006-04-12

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Authors:  Allan Young
Journal:  Sci Context       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 0.425

6.  The Non-Darwinian Revolution. Reinterpreting a Historical Myth. Peter . Bowler. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1988. xii, 238 pp., illus. $27.50.

Authors:  D L Hull
Journal:  Science       Date:  1988-12-23       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Glandular politics. Experimental biology, clinical medicine, and homosexual emancipation in fin-de-siècle central Europe.

Authors:  C Sengoopta
Journal:  Isis       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 0.688

  7 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  A historical and evolutionary perspective on the biological significance of circulating DNA and extracellular vesicles.

Authors:  Janine Aucamp; Abel J Bronkhorst; Christoffel P S Badenhorst; Piet J Pretorius
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2016-09-20       Impact factor: 9.261

  1 in total

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