
In the opening pages, the author presents a startling snapshot of early‑20th‑century America’s obsession with “better babies.” A prize‑winning toddler, measured down to the last fraction of an inch, is held up as a model for the future health of the nation, illustrating the era’s belief that physical perfection could be engineered through careful breeding. The tone is clinical yet persuasive, inviting listeners to consider how science, morality, and social ambition intersected in the public eye.
From that vivid example the book expands into a practical guide for parents, confronting topics that were then deemed taboo—puberty, sexual desire, and the rampant spread of venereal disease. Written by a physician, it blends frank medical facts with moral advice, urging families to replace prudish silence with informed conversation in order to protect both individual well‑being and the broader genetic stock. Listeners will discover how these early eugenic ideas shaped public‑health campaigns and continue to echo in modern debates about reproductive responsibility.
Full title
The Eugenic Marriage, Volume 2 (of 4) A Personal Guide to the New Science of Better Living and Better Babies
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (366K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by K.D. Thornton, Jason Isbell, Josephine Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2008-03-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1868
A physician-writer from early 20th-century New York, he is best known for The Eugenic Marriage, a four-volume guide that mixed medical advice with the era's deeply flawed ideas about heredity and family life. His work offers a revealing snapshot of how medicine, social values, and pseudoscience could overlap in that period.
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