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- Title
Biology and the Jewish question after the revolution: one Soviet approach to the productivization of Jewish labor.
- Authors
Weinberg, Robert
- Abstract
In the 1920s a group of health professionals and biologists in the Soviet Union embraced the nascent eugenics movement in order to justify the promotion of physical labor among Jews. Eugenics offered a scientific approach to solving the “Jewish question” through the productivization of Soviet Jewry. Drawing upon the work of Jean Baptiste de Lamarck, this group linked the settlement of Jews on the land to the belief that the physiognomy of Jews engaged in physical labor would be genetically passed on to their offspring. The goal was to overcome the perceived debilitating psychological and physical traits of shtetl Jewry by mobilizing Soviet Jewry for the building of socialism. By the late 1920s, however, eugenics fell victim to the Kremlin’s materialist conception of human society that emphasized social engineering and voluntarism and excluded biological influences on the transformation of Soviet society.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL colonies; JEWS; EUGENICS; SOCIALISM; SOCIAL conditions of Jews; LAMARCK, Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet de, 1744-1829; SOCIAL history; COLONIZATION
- Publication
Jewish History, 2007, Vol 21, Issue 3/4, p413
- ISSN
0334-701X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10835-007-9040-9