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The Strength of a Loosely Defined Movement: Eugenics and Medicine in Imperial Russia
Authors:Nikolai Krementsov
Affiliation:Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology, University of Toronto, 91 Charles Street West, Toronto, ON M5S 1K7, Canada
Abstract:This essay examines the ‘infiltration’ of eugenics into Russian medical discourse during the formation of the eugenics movement in western Europe and North America in 1900–17. It describes the efforts of two Russian physicians, the bacteriologist and hygienist Nikolai Gamaleia (1859–1949) and the psychiatrist Tikhon Iudin (1879–1949), to introduce eugenics to the Russian medical community, analysing in detail what attracted these representatives of two different medical specialties to eugenic ideas, ideals, and policies advocated by their western colleagues. On the basis of a close examination of the similarities and differences in Gamaleia’s and Iudin’s attitudes to eugenics, the essay argues that lack of cohesiveness gave the early eugenics movement a unique strength. The loose mix of widely varying ideas, ideals, methods, policies, activities and proposals covered by the umbrella of eugenics offered to a variety of educated professionals in Russia and elsewhere the possibility of choosing, adopting and adapting particular elements to their own national, professional, institutional and disciplinary contexts, interests and agendas.
Keywords:Eugenics movement   Nikolai Gamaleia   Tikhon Iudin   Russian medicine   Heredity   Public health
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