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The rapid multiplication of the unfit

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First Sentence
"One of the most fruitful sources of error is the supposition or the taking for granted that others will see and comprehend human nature as we see and comprehend it."
39 pages
~39 min to read
Published 1891 The Women's Anthropological Society of America 1 views
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Description

In 2005, this book and several other difficult-to-find published speeches on eugenics by Victoria C. Woodhull were republished in high-quality facsimile in a collection entitled: Lady Eugenist: Feminist Eugenics in the Speeches and Writings of Victoria Woodhull. ISBN: 978-1-1-58742-040-5 (pb) and 978-1058742-041-2 (hb). The collection includes: Children--Their Rights and Privileges (1871); Press Notices (1869-1882, publ. 1890. An excellent source of background on her speeches on eugenics in the early 1870s); The Garden of Eden (1875, publ. 1890); Stirpiculture (1888); Humanitarian Government ((1890); The Scientific Propagation of the Human Race (1893). Lady Eugenist also includes other useful background information and commentary, including newspaper articles from the period. This pamphlet, "The Rapid Multiplication of the Unfit," perhaps got the widest circulation of all her published speeches. A better representation of what she was saying in the early 1870s can be found in her "The Scientific Propagation of the Human Race," which she says on the first page was "A Lecture Delivered at Carnegie Music Hall, New York City, November 20th, 1893 and throughout America, from 1870 to 1876." Note too that her ideas on eugenics seemed to be based more on ideas about human breeding circulating among utopian communities in the Midwest when she was going up there than on Galton or Darwinian thinking. She hints at that in the first paragraph of "Scientific Propagation." In the 1870s, her ideas on eugenics were also closely linked to her radical ideas about marriage and family life, as well as folk ideas about influences on a mother during pregnancy impacting her baby. Her major published speeches on eugenics have been republished in high-quality facsimile in Lady Eugenist (2005, details in Notes below) along with some additional material, including articles from newspapers of that period.

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