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The Eugenics Movement - An Encyclopedia (Hardcover): Ruth Clifford Engs The Eugenics Movement - An Encyclopedia (Hardcover)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R2,639 Discovery Miles 26 390 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

An A-to-Z overview of eugenics - one of the most controversial scientific and cultural movements of the last century Eugenics - the theory that we can improve future generations of humans through selective breeding - was one of the most controversial movements of the early 20th century. Often tied to racist beliefs and nativist desires to limit immigration, the eugenics movement attracted some of the most prominent scientists and social reformers of the day. This encyclopedia brings into one place concise descriptions of the leading figures, organizations, events, legislation, publications, concepts, and terms of this vitally important historical movement. Although focused on the United States during the heyday of the movement, the encyclopedia includes material on international events as well as connections to important contemporary issues such as genetic engineering, family balancing, and the possibility of human cloning. 250 entries on such topics as: inherited conditions such as alcoholism, prostitution, poverty, and criminality that eugenicists thought could be eliminated by following eugenic methods; concepts such as feeblemindedness, race degeneracy, and race suicide that were pervasive during the era of the eugenics movement; tools that eugenicists relied on, such as laws that allowed forced sterilizations of the unfit; organizations that encouraged the fit to produce more children; the continued acceptance of attempts to improve future generations through genetic testing and treatment. The book includes photographs, a chronology of events, and an extensive bibliography of works for further information.. Examines a controversial aspect of scientific history. Discusses how contemporary controversies over genetic engineering relate to the eugenics theories of the past

Clean Living Movements - American Cycles of Health Reform (Hardcover, New): Ruth Clifford Engs Clean Living Movements - American Cycles of Health Reform (Hardcover, New)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R2,593 Discovery Miles 25 930 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Over the past 200 years, a health reform movement has emerged about every 80 years. These clean living cycles surged with, or were tangential to, a religious awakening. Simultaneously with these awakenings, out groups such as immigrants and/or youth were seen to exhibit behaviors that undermined society. Middle class fear of these dangerous classes and a desire to eliminate disease, crime, and other perceived health or social problems led to crusades in each of the three reform eras against alcohol, tobacco, drugs, certain foods, and sexual behaviors. A backlash began to emerge from some segments of the population against reform efforts. After the dissipation of the activism phase, laws made during the reform era often became ignored or repealed. With a few exceptions, during the 30 to 40 year ebb of the cycle, the memory of the movement disappeared from public awareness.

The desire for improved health and social conditions also led to campaigns in favor of exercise, semi-vegetarian diets, women's rights, chastity, and eugenics. Engs describes the interweaving of temperance, women's rights, or religion with most health issues. Factions of established faiths emerged to fight perceived immorality, while alternative religions formed and adopted health reform as dogma. In the reform phase of each cycle, a new infectious disease threatened the population. Some alternative medical practices became popular that later were incorporated into orthodox medicine and public health. Ironically, over each succeeding movement, reformers became more likely to represent grass roots beliefs, or even to be state or federal officials, rather than independent activists.

The Progressive Era's Health Reform Movement - A Historical Dictionary (Hardcover): Ruth Clifford Engs The Progressive Era's Health Reform Movement - A Historical Dictionary (Hardcover)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R2,615 Discovery Miles 26 150 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Religious, political, social, and health reform earmarked the Progressive Era. The era's health reform movement--like today's clean living movement--saw campaigns against alcohol, tobacco, drugs, and sexuality. It included crusades for exercise, vegetarian diets, and alternative health care and concerns about eugenics and new diseases. Covering the years leading up to the Progressive Era through the 1920s, this book provides entries on the central figures, events, crusades, legislation, publications and terms of the health reform movements, while a detailed timeline ties health reform to political, social, and religious movements. A valuable resource for scholars, students, and laymen interested in earlier health reform movements.

Bizarre Medicine - Unusual Treatments and Practices through the Ages (Hardcover): Ruth Clifford Engs Bizarre Medicine - Unusual Treatments and Practices through the Ages (Hardcover)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R3,130 Discovery Miles 31 300 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This encyclopedia explores historical and contemporary fringe remedies seen as strange, ridiculous, or even gruesome by modern Western medicine but which nevertheless played an important role in the history of medicine. From placing leeches on the neck to treat a cough to using crocodile dung to prevent pregnancy, a number of medical treatments that now seem unusual were once commonplace. While a few of these remedies may have been effective, most were either useless or actually counterproductive to good health. Even today, there are alternative and fringe treatments considered bizarre by mainstream medicine yet used by hundreds of thousands of people. Bizarre Medicine: Unusual Treatments and Practices through the Ages offers a fascinating look into the history of medicine. Entries are organized by disease or medical condition and explore the folk and traditional "cures" used to treat them. Explanations are provided for why some treatments may have worked and why others may have done more harm than good. In addition, entries provide a clear description of the causes, symptoms, and current treatment options for each condition based on current scientific understanding. Each entry also discusses the condition's enduring impact on society and the arts. An introductory essay creates a robust conceptual framework for readers, allowing them to better understand the entries that follow Entries not only explore unusual treatments but also provide a clear explanation of how the medical condition is understood and addressed today and how it has impacted society through the ages A glossary defines terms that may be unfamiliar to readers An extensive back-of-book bibliography serves as a gateway to further research and study

Unseen Upton Sinclair - Nine Unpublished Stories, Essays and Other Works (Paperback): Upton Sinclair Unseen Upton Sinclair - Nine Unpublished Stories, Essays and Other Works (Paperback)
Upton Sinclair; Edited by Ruth Clifford Engs
R1,061 R676 Discovery Miles 6 760 Save R385 (36%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Best known for his muckraking expose of the squalor and brutality that pervaded the livestock industry in his book The Jungle, Upton Sinclair's political activism was not limited to issues of workers' rights or workplace safety. These nine short works, never before published, reveal an author who also wrestled with questions concerning women's independence and the state of the health care industry in America. Always controversial, Sinclair ranges here from the comic to the deadly serious, while investigating issues that include artificial insemination and dietary measures. A substantial biographical introduction gives new insights into Sinclair's concerns.

The Field Hospital That Never Was - Diary of Lt. Col. Karl D. Macmillan's, MD, 96th Field Hospital in China-India-Burma... The Field Hospital That Never Was - Diary of Lt. Col. Karl D. Macmillan's, MD, 96th Field Hospital in China-India-Burma Theater 1945, WWII (Paperback)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R516 Discovery Miles 5 160 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Conversations in the Abbey, Vol. II - The Next Generation of Senior Monks of Saint Meinrad Reflects on Their Lives (Paperback):... Conversations in the Abbey, Vol. II - The Next Generation of Senior Monks of Saint Meinrad Reflects on Their Lives (Paperback)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R571 Discovery Miles 5 710 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Conversations in the Abbey - Senior Monks of Saint Meinrad Reflect on Their Lives (Paperback): Ruth Clifford Engs Conversations in the Abbey - Senior Monks of Saint Meinrad Reflect on Their Lives (Paperback)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R575 Discovery Miles 5 750 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Conversations in the Abbey profiles elder monks of Saint Meinrad Archabbey in southern Indiana. Eleven monks talk about their lives, prayer and work, and how they've changed over the decades. Other chapters tell of the abbey's work over the years.

Clean Living Movements - American Cycles of Health Reform (Paperback): Ruth Clifford Engs Clean Living Movements - American Cycles of Health Reform (Paperback)
Ruth Clifford Engs
R1,300 Discovery Miles 13 000 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Over the past 200 years, a health reform movement has emerged about every 80 years. These "clean living" cycles surged with, or were tangential to, a religious awakening. Simultaneously with these awakenings, out groups such as immigrants and/or youth were seen to exhibit behaviors that undermined society. Middle class fear of these "dangerous" classes and a desire to eliminate disease, crime, and other perceived health or social problems led to crusades in each of the three reform eras against alcohol, tobacco, drugs, certain foods, and sexual behaviors. A backlash began to emerge from some segments of the population against reform efforts. After the dissipation of the activism phase, laws made during the reform era often became ignored or repealed. With a few exceptions, during the 30 to 40 year ebb of the cycle, the memory of the movement disappeared from public awareness. The desire for improved health and social conditions also led to campaigns in favor of exercise, semi-vegetarian diets, women's rights, chastity, and eugenics. Engs describes the interweaving of temperance, women's rights, or religion with most health issues. Factions of established faiths emerged to fight perceived immorality, while alternative religions formed and adopted health reform as dogma. In the reform phase of each cycle, a new infectious disease threatened the population. Some alternative medical practices became popular that later were incorporated into orthodox medicine and public health. Ironically, over each succeeding movement, reformers became more likely to represent grass roots beliefs, or even to be state or federal officials, rather than independent activists.

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