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1945年后的人类遗传:让人口成为焦点。

Human heredity after 1945: moving populations centre stage.

作者信息

Bangham Jenny, de Chadarevian Soraya

机构信息

Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Germany.

University of California Los Angeles, Department of History and Institute for Society and Genetics, 6265 Bunche Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1473, USA.

出版信息

Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci. 2014 Sep;47 Pt A:45-9. doi: 10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.005. Epub 2014 Jul 4.

Abstract

The essays in this issue look at the contested history of human heredity after 1945 from a new analytical angle, that of populations and the ways in which they were constructed and studied. One consequence of this approach is that we do not limit our attention to the disciplinary study of genetics. After the Second World War, populations became a central topic for an array of fields, including demography, anthropology, epidemiology, and public health. Human heredity had a role in all of these: demographers carried out mental surveys in efforts to distinguish hereditary from environmental factors, doctors screened newborns and tested pregnant women for chromosome disorders; anthropologists collected blood from remote locations to gain insights into the evolutionary history of human populations; geneticists monitored people exposed to radiation. Through this work, populations were labelled as clinical, normal, primitive, pure, vulnerable or exotic. We ask: how were populations chosen, who qualified as members, and how was the study of human heredity shaped by technical, institutional and geopolitical conditions? By following the practical and conceptual work to define populations as objects of research, the essays trace the circulation of practices across different fields and contexts, bringing into view new actors, institutions, and geographies. By doing so the collection shows how human heredity research was linked to the broader politics of the postwar world, one profoundly conditioned by Cold War tensions, by nationalist concerns, by colonial and post-colonial struggles, by modernisation projects and by a new internationalism.

摘要

本期的这些文章从一个新的分析角度审视了1945年之后充满争议的人类遗传学史,即从人口以及构建和研究人口的方式这一角度。这种方法带来的一个结果是,我们不会将注意力局限于遗传学的学科研究。第二次世界大战之后,人口成为一系列领域的核心主题,包括人口统计学、人类学、流行病学和公共卫生。人类遗传在所有这些领域都发挥了作用:人口统计学家进行智力调查,试图区分遗传因素和环境因素;医生对新生儿进行筛查,并对孕妇进行染色体疾病检测;人类学家从偏远地区采集血液,以深入了解人类种群的进化史;遗传学家监测接触辐射的人群。通过这些工作,不同人群被贴上了临床、正常、原始、纯粹、易受影响或异域等标签。我们要问:人群是如何被选定的,谁有资格成为其中的一员,以及人类遗传研究是如何受到技术、制度和地缘政治条件影响的?通过追踪将人群定义为研究对象的实践和概念性工作,这些文章追溯了不同领域和背景下实践的传播情况,揭示了新的行为者、机构和地域。这样一来,这个文集展示了人类遗传研究是如何与战后世界更广泛的政治相联系 的,而战后世界深受冷战紧张局势、民族主义关切、殖民与后殖民斗争、现代化项目以及一种新国际主义的深刻影响。

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