Our Own Master Race: Eugenics in Canada, 1885-1945

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University of Toronto Press, Dec 15, 1990 - History - 230 pages

Was Canada immune to the racist currents of thought that swept central Europe in the 1920's and 1930's? In this landmark book Angus McLaren, co-author of The Bedroom and the State, examines the pervasiveness in Canada of the eugenic notion of "race betterment" and demonstrates that many Canadians believed that radical measures were justified to protect the community from the "degenerate." The sterilization of the feeble-minded in Alberta and British Columbia was merely the most dramatic attempt to limit the numbers of the "unfit." But in the decades prior to World War Two, eugenic preoccupations were to colour discussions of immigration restriction, birth control, mental testing, family allowances, and a host of similar social policies.

Doctors, psychiatrists, geneticists, social workers, and mental hygienists provided an anxious Canadian middle class with the reassuring argument that poverty, crime, prostitution, and mental retardation were primarily the products of defective genes, not a defective social system. In explaining why biological solutions were sought for social problems McLaren not only provides a provocative reappraisal of the ideas and activities of a generation of feminists, political progressives, and public health propagandists but he also explores some of the roots of our not-so-latent racist tendencies.

 

Contents

Preface
1842
The Birth of Biological Politics
1851
Public Health and Hereditarian Concerns
1873
Stemming the Flood of Defective Aliens
1899
Sex Science and Race Betterment
1939
Creating a Haven for Human Thoroughbreds
The Eugenics Society of Canada
Genetics Eugenics and Human Pedigrees
The Death of Eugenics?
Epilogue
Notes
Index
Copyright

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About the author (1990)

Angus McLaren, the author of a number of books on the history of fertility control, is Professor of History at the University of Victoria

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