Dowbiggin, Ian R. “An Exodus of Enthusiasm: G. Alder Blumer, Eugenics, and U.S. Psychiatry, 1890-1920”. Medical History [Great Britain], vol. 36, no. 4, 1992, pp. 379-02, https://doi.org/10.1017/s002572730005568x.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Dowbiggin, Ian R.
Date Issued
1992
Abstract

Tracks the change of heart on the subject of eugenics experienced by notable psychiatrist G. Alder Blumer during 1890-1920. Negative eugenics, stressing the need to eliminate unfavorable traits through reproductive control, resulted in thousands of the mentally ill being sterilized. While working at the New York State Lunatic Asylum in Utica, Blumer became an enthusiastic proponent of negative eugenics. But upon moving to the more progressive Butler Hospital for the Insane in Providence, Rhode Island, Blumer came to believe more in therapeutic approaches to mental illness.

Note

Documentation: Based on Blumer's papers, New York State Lunatic Asylum records, and secondary sources; illus., 76 notes.; Abstracter: R. Haas

Source type: Electronic(1)

Language

  • English

Subjects

  • Eugenics.
  • 1890-1920
  • Psychiatry.
  • New York.
  • Rhode Island.
  • Blumer, G. Alder
Rights
Contact Publisher
Page range
379-402
Host Title
Medical History [Great Britain]
Volume
36
Issue
4
ISSN
0025-7273