Emma, Carrie, Vivian

艾玛、嘉莉、薇薇安

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2019-02-19

39 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

The eugenicists were utopians, convinced that they were doing hard but necessary things. And that included making decisions about who could have children.
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单集文稿 ...

  • This is hidden brain.

  • I'm Shankar Vedantam.

  • On June 4, 1924, a girl was admitted to the Virginia state colony for epileptics and feeble minded.

  • She was white, dark haired, and 17 years old.

  • She became colony inmate 1692.

  • The medical superintendent of the colony examined her.

  • He declared her healthy, free of syphilis, able to read, write, and keep herself tidy.

  • And then he classified her as feeble minded of the lowest grade moron class.

  • With that designation, this young woman, whod already lost more than many people could bear in a lifetime, was set on a path she didnt choose.

  • What happened next laid the foundation for one of the most tragic social experiments in american the forced sterilization of tens of thousands of people.

  • This story has resonance even today.

  • It's about how science and the law, tools that we have created to help improve our lives, can easily become instruments of prejudice and oppression.

  • It's a story of hubris and about good intentions gone awry.

  • Eugenics and the science of better breeding.

  • This week on hidden brain.

  • First of all, please tell me your name.

  • Carrie Elizabeth Didmore.

  • In 1980, an NPR reporter, Wendy Blair, took a trip to a one room shack outside Charlottesville, Virginia.

  • She'd come to interview a 78 year old woman.

  • Her married name was Dedimore, but her given name was Carrie Buck.