Blood, Race, and National Identity: Scientific and Popular DiscoursesPosted in Articles, Europe, Health/Medicine/Genetics, History, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2010-03-21 02:35Z by Steven |
Blood, Race, and National Identity: Scientific and Popular Discourses
Journal of Medical Humanities
Volume 23, Numbers 3-4 (December, 2002)
Pages 171-186
Print ISSN: 1041-3545; Online ISSN: 1573-3645
DOI: 10.1023/A:1016890117447
Allyson Polsky McCabe, Lecturer in English
Yale University
This essay examines the symbolic significance of blood in the twentieth century and its role in determining the composition of a national community along racial lines. By drawing parallels between Nazi notions of blood and racial purity and historically contemporaneous U.S. policies regarding blood and blood products, Polsky reveals a disturbing proximity in discourse and policy. While the Nazis attempted to locate Jewish racial essence and inferiority in blood and instituted eugenic measures and laws forbidding racial admixture, similar policies existed in the U.S. based on the so-called one drop rule that systematically discriminated against African Americans.
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