The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II

This article penetrates the idealistic, Marxist concept of the 'new  Soviet man', linking it with the notion of eugenics. Departing from a reconstruction of the history and specificity of the eugenic movement in Russia since the late 19th century until the installation of Joseph Stalin as...

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Main Author: Filip Bardziński
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Adam Mickiewicz University 2013-02-01
Series:Ethics in Progress
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/9447
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spelling doaj-81b410685fe2451fb4227823ecc198e02020-11-25T01:29:06ZdeuAdam Mickiewicz UniversityEthics in Progress2084-92572084-92572013-02-014157819086The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War IIFilip Bardziński0Adam Mickiewicz UniversityThis article penetrates the idealistic, Marxist concept of the 'new  Soviet man', linking it with the notion of eugenics. Departing from a reconstruction of the history and specificity of the eugenic movement in Russia since the late 19th century until the installation of Joseph Stalin as the only ruler of the Soviet Union, Lysenkoism paradigm of Soviet natural sciences is being evoked as a theoretical frame for Soviet-specific eugenic programme. Through referring to a number of chosen – both theoretical (classic Marxist works) and practical (chosen aspects of Soviet science and internal politics) – issues and cases, the concept of the 'new Soviet man' is being confronted with an original reading of eugenics, understood in neo-Lamarckian terms of direct shaping human beings through environmental conditions (comprehending the GULag system of labour camps, pseudo-medical experiments and other) and intergenerational transfer (through inheritance) of acquired traits.https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/9447eugenics, New Soviet Man, Lysenkoism, biopower.
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Filip Bardziński
spellingShingle Filip Bardziński
The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II
Ethics in Progress
eugenics, New Soviet Man, Lysenkoism, biopower.
author_facet Filip Bardziński
author_sort Filip Bardziński
title The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II
title_short The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II
title_full The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II
title_fullStr The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II
title_full_unstemmed The Concept of the 'New Soviet Man' As a Eugenic Project: Eugenics in Soviet Russia after World War II
title_sort concept of the 'new soviet man' as a eugenic project: eugenics in soviet russia after world war ii
publisher Adam Mickiewicz University
series Ethics in Progress
issn 2084-9257
2084-9257
publishDate 2013-02-01
description This article penetrates the idealistic, Marxist concept of the 'new  Soviet man', linking it with the notion of eugenics. Departing from a reconstruction of the history and specificity of the eugenic movement in Russia since the late 19th century until the installation of Joseph Stalin as the only ruler of the Soviet Union, Lysenkoism paradigm of Soviet natural sciences is being evoked as a theoretical frame for Soviet-specific eugenic programme. Through referring to a number of chosen – both theoretical (classic Marxist works) and practical (chosen aspects of Soviet science and internal politics) – issues and cases, the concept of the 'new Soviet man' is being confronted with an original reading of eugenics, understood in neo-Lamarckian terms of direct shaping human beings through environmental conditions (comprehending the GULag system of labour camps, pseudo-medical experiments and other) and intergenerational transfer (through inheritance) of acquired traits.
topic eugenics, New Soviet Man, Lysenkoism, biopower.
url https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/9447
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