PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

"Monstrous births” and the making of race in the nineteenth-century United States

2023-09-07
(Press-News.org) From the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment, “monstrous births”—malformed or anomalous fetuses—were, to Western medicine, an object of superstition. In 19th-century America, they became instead an object of the “modern scientific study of monstrosity,” a field formalized by French scientist Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire. This clinical turn was positioned against the backdrop of social, political, and economic activity that codified laws governing slavery, citizenship, immigration, family, wealth, and access to resources. In a new article published in Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society, “Monstrosity in Medical Science: Race-Making and Teratology in the Nineteenth-Century United States,” Miriam Rich demonstrates how scientific interest in monstrous births served as a mechanism for stabilizing notions of race and racial hierarchy, and shaped modern medical discourse into a project of making race.  

Rich presents three frameworks, or “logics of race,” that structured the study of monstrous birth, beginning with the schema of development in the field of teratology. Teratology, informed by the theory of epigenesis, proposed that monstrosity was caused by an arrest in the development of a fetus before it could reach its final, more perfect form. This model was predicated on a belief in both teleological progress and a hierarchy of being. It overlapped with taxonomies of race that placed white Europeans at the top, and therefore implied a correlation between infant “monsters” and the racialized subjects who fell farther down the continuum of species. As Rich writes, “Through the scientific framework of teratological development, monstrosity gained specificity as a way to articulate the nature of racial difference—as hierarchical, temporalized, and biologically embodied.” 

The second logic of race articulated by Rich is that of the monster as “a race apart.” The “race apart” framework proposed that monstrous births comprised their own species, distinct even from human race categories, and was supported by the fact that monsters could be born to women of any race. Rich draws upon the examples of an enslaved Black woman in Georgia and a white English woman in Philadelphia, both of whom gave birth to infants with anencephaly. As she notes, “Within a leading taxonomic cosmology of the era’s medical science…the two women in these cases did not belong to the same species as one another—but, remarkably, their monstrous infants did.” Rich suggests that despite the departure this theory represents from contemporary notions of race as congenital and immanent, the “race apart” thesis was ultimately used to legitimize a system of racial hierarchy.  

The third and final logic of race examined in this article is that of “monstrosity as racial degeneracy.” In the aftermath of Emancipation, fears on the part of white hegemony regarding the destabilized racial categories that slavery had once upheld were transmuted into fears regarding social and evolutionary decline. Since the favored model of Darwinian evolution at this time was one of progress, and the theory of teratology had conflated fetal developmental progress with whiteness, monstrous births in this period were seen as signs of atavism, and thus of regression into non-whiteness. In addition to reinforcing the racial boundaries of the late 19th-century, Rich writes, this schema of monstrosity would also pave the way for early 20th-century eugenics.  

In this article, Rich argues that the interpretation of monstrosity used by 19th-century scientists had significant implications for the racial caste system in the United States and for medicine as a discipline. The study of monstrous births shaped human reproduction into a site of the inscription of fixed racial difference, and embedded within modern medical discourse a practice of racial hierarchy.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in the brain

2023-09-07
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Every day we encounter circumstances we consider wrong: a starving child, a corrupt politician, an unfaithful partner, a fraudulent scientist. These examples highlight several moral issues, including matters of care, fairness and betrayal. But does anything unite them all? Philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have passionately argued whether moral judgments share something distinctive that separates them from non-moral matters. Moral monists claim that morality is unified by a common characteristic and that all moral issues involve concerns about harm. Pluralists, in contrast, argue that moral ...

Echoes of extinctions: novel method unearths disruptions in mammal trait-environment relationships

Echoes of extinctions: novel method unearths disruptions in mammal trait-environment relationships
2023-09-07
Large-bodied mammals play crucial roles in ecosystems. They create habitats, serve as prey, help plants thrive, and even influence how wildfires burn. But now, fewer than half of the large mammal species that were alive 50,000 years ago exist today, and those that remain are threatened with extinction from intensifying climate change and human activities. While mammal extinctions are well-documented, very little research has explored the impact those losses had on the nuanced ways in which mammal communities interact with their environments. Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology are using a novel methodology to investigate how mammals’ ability to function in their environments ...

Specialized T cells in the brain slow progression of Alzheimer’s disease

Specialized T cells in the brain slow progression of Alzheimer’s disease
2023-09-07
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – September 07, 2023) As many as 5.8 million Americans are currently living with Alzheimer’s disease, a neurodegenerative condition associated with progressive cognitive decline, including loss of memory capabilities . Protein aggregates, composed of beta-amyloid or other proteins, form in the brains of individuals with Alzheimer’s. These beta-amyloid plaques appear to be a significant contributor to the disease. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists uncovered a subset of immune cells that appears to slow this beta-amyloid plaque accumulation ...

KERI, transfer of ‘ion implantation evaluation technology for the SiC power semiconductor’ to Hungary

KERI, transfer of ‘ion implantation evaluation technology for the SiC power semiconductor’ to Hungary
2023-09-07
KERI succeeded in transferring the ‘Ion Implantation and its Evaluation Technology for the SiC (silicon carbide) Power Semiconductor’ to a Hungarian company.   Power semiconductors are key components in electricity and electronics, acting as the muscles of the human body by regulating the direction of current and controlling power conversion. There are many different materials for power semiconductors. Among them, SiC is receiving the most attention due to its excellent material properties, including high durability and excellent power efficiency. When SiC power ...

VCU liver institute director leads review of noninvasive tests that could be alternatives to painful biopsies

2023-09-07
By A.J. Hostetler Led by the director of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Stravitz-Sanyal Institute of Liver Disease and Metabolic Health, a consortium studying noninvasive tests for liver disease has demonstrated the effectiveness of five noninvasive tests, a significant milestone on the path to regulatory approval. In an article published today in the journal Nature Medicine, institute director Arun Sanyal, M.D., a professor at the VCU School of Medicine, and colleagues report on five biomarker tests that potentially could be given to patients who may have ...

Early access to testosterone therapy in transgender and gender-diverse adults seeking masculinization

2023-09-07
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial including 64 transgender and gender-diverse adults, immediate testosterone therapy compared with no treatment significantly reduced gender dysphoria, depression, and suicidality in transgender and gender-diverse individuals desiring testosterone therapy.  Authors: Ada S. Cheung, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., of Austin Health in Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.31919) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for ...

Analysis of heat exposure during pregnancy and severe maternal morbidity

2023-09-07
About The Study: Long- and short-term heat exposure during pregnancy was associated with higher risk of severe maternal morbidity in this study with 403,000 pregnancies from 2008 to 2018 in Southern California. These results might have important implications for severe maternal morbidity prevention, particularly in a changing climate.  Authors: Jun Wu, Ph.D., of the University of California, Irvine, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.32780) Editor’s Note: Please ...

Calcium channel blocker use and associated glaucoma and related traits

2023-09-07
About The Study: Calcium channel blocker use was adversely associated with glaucoma prevalence in this study of 427,000 adult UK Biobank participants, suggesting that calcium channel blockers may represent an important modifiable risk factor for glaucoma, potentially through an intraocular pressure–independent mechanism.  Authors: Alan Kastner, M.D., M.Sc., of the Moorfields Eye Hospital National Health Service Foundation Trust and University College London Institute of Ophthalmology in London, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2023.3877) Editor’s ...

Phase I clinical trial shows treatment designed to clear senescent cells in Alzheimer’s disease is safe

Phase I clinical trial shows treatment designed to clear senescent cells in Alzheimer’s disease is safe
2023-09-07
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Sept. 7, 2023 –  Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia that affects more than 6.5 million Americans, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. To find effective treatments and slow the progression of this debilitating disease, researchers have made much progress in developing new drugs that target beta-amyloid plaques, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. Beta-amyloid plaques are accumulations of brain protein fragments, which can impact cognition. However, these recent drugs have only yielded modest results. Now, ...

Ravenous black hole consumes three Earths’-worth of star every time it passes

Ravenous black hole consumes three Earths’-worth of star every time it passes
2023-09-07
A star like our own Sun in a nearby galaxy is gradually being eaten away by a small but ravenous black hole, losing the equivalent mass of three Earths every time it passes close. The discovery by University of Leicester astronomers is reported today (7 September) in Nature Astronomy and provides a ‘missing link’ in our knowledge of black holes disrupting orbiting stars. It suggests a whole menagerie of stars in the process of being consumed that still lie undiscovered. The team was supported by the UK Space Agency and the UK Science and technology Facilities Council (STFC). The astronomers were alerted to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Eco-friendly biomass pretreatment method yields efficient biofuels and adsorbents

How graph convolutions amplify popularity bias for recommendation?

New lignin-based hydrogel breakthrough for wound healing and controlled drug release

Enhancing compatibility and biodegradability of PLA/biomass composites via forest residue torrefaction

Time alone heightens ‘threat alert’ in teenagers – even when connecting on social media

Study challenges long-held theories on how migratory birds navigate 

Unlocking the secrets of ketosis

AI analysis of PET/CT images can predict side effects of immunotherapy in lung cancer

Making an impact. Research studies a new side of helmet safety: faceguard failures

Specific long term condition combinations have major role in NHS ‘winter pressures’

Men often struggle with transition to fatherhood amid lack of targeted information and support

More green space linked to fewer preventable deaths in most deprived areas of UK

Immunotherapy drug pembrolizumab improves outcomes for patients with soft tissue sarcoma

A formula for life? New model calculates chances of intelligent beings in our Universe and beyond

Could a genetic flaw be the key to stopping people craving sugary treats?

Experts urge complex systems approach to assess A.I. risks

Fossil fuel CO2 emissions increase again in 2024

Winners of Applied Microbiology International Horizon Awards 2024 announced

A toolkit for unraveling the links between intimate partner violence, trauma and substance misuse

Can everyday physical activity improve cognitive health in middle age?

Updated guidance reaffirms CPR with breaths essential for cardiac arrest following drowning

Study reveals medical boards rarely discipline physician misinformation

New treatment helps children with rare spinal condition regain ability to walk

'Grow Your Own' teacher prep pipeline at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette funded by US Department of Education

Lab-grown human immune system uncovers weakened response in cancer patients

More than 5 million Americans would be eligible for psychedelic therapy, study finds

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers find community health workers play critical role in coordinating asthma care across home, school and community

Comprehensive Genomic Profiling leads to better patient outcomes, new joint study says  

Animated movie characters with strabismus are more likely to be villains, study finds

How retailers change ordering strategy when a supplier starts its own direct channel

[Press-News.org] "Monstrous births” and the making of race in the nineteenth-century United States