At the beginning of the twentieth century, industrialization
both dramatically altered everyday experiences and shaped debates
about the effects of immigration, empire, and urbanization. In
American Abyss, Daniel E. Bender examines an array of sources
eugenics theories, scientific studies of climate, socialist theory,
and even popular novels about cavemen to show how intellectuals and
activists came to understand industrialization in racial and
gendered terms as the product of evolution and as the highest
expression of civilization.
Their discussions, he notes, are echoed today by the use of such
terms as the "developed" and "developing" worlds. American industry
was contrasted with the supposed savagery and primitivism
discovered in tropical colonies, but observers who made those
claims worried that industrialization, by encouraging immigration,
child and women's labor, and large families, was reversing natural
selection. Factories appeared to favor the most unfit. There was a
disturbing tendency for such expressions of fear to favor
eugenicist "remedies."
Bender delves deeply into the culture and politics of the age of
industry. Linking urban slum tourism and imperial science with
immigrant better-baby contests and hoboes, American Abyss uncovers
the complex interactions of turn-of-the-century ideas about race,
class, gender, and ethnicity. Moreover, at a time when immigration
again lies at the center of American economy and society, this book
offers an alarming and pointed historical perspective on
contemporary fears of immigrant laborers."
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