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13. The Reaffirmation of the Polygenist ‘Tree’

  • Marianne Sommer (author)

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Metadata
Title13. The Reaffirmation of the Polygenist ‘Tree’
ContributorMarianne Sommer (author)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.11647/obp.0396.16
Landing pagehttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0396/chapters/10.11647/obp.0396.16
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
CopyrightMarianne Sommer
PublisherOpen Book Publishers
Published on2024-07-30
Long abstractThis did not mean the end of diagrams for ‘racial distancing’ and ‘racial hierarchies’, however. The influential British anthropologist, Arthur Keith, for example, in exchange with colleagues like Earnest Hooton and Reginald Ruggles Gates, suggested in the middle of the twentieth century that the branches leading to the modern human ‘races’ extended millions of years back in time and stocked them with different (postulated) fossil genera, without the assumption of gene transfer between the lines. Such diagrams were only topped by views that phylogenetically aligned modern human groups with different nonhuman primate lines. Chapter 13 engages with some of the scientific and political issues associated with this trend, also drawing attention to the ways in which, in circulation, diagrams could change their meanings.
Page rangepp. 177–190
Print length14 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Contributors

Marianne Sommer

(author)
Chair of Kulturwissenschaften at the Department for Cultural and Science Studies at University of Lucerne

Marianne Sommer holds the chair of Kulturwissenschaften at the Department for Cultural and Science Studies at the University of Lucerne, Switzerland. Prior to that, she has held postdoctoral positions and professorships at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin, Pennsylvania State University, the ETH Zurich and University of Zurich, and has been a guest at many institutions, including Stanford University. For her research in the history of earth, life, and human sciences, encompassing processes of narration, visualization, and exhibition, she has received the Swiss National Latsis Prize. Her monograph History Within (published with The University of Chicago Press in 2016) engages with the science, politics, and culture related to reconstructions of human evolutionary histories; it traces the generation and circulation of such knowledge from the late nineteenth century to the present, including through venues like the museum, the zoo, literature, or the web. Among her monographs are also Bones and Ochre: The Curious Afterlife of the Red Lady of Paviland (published with Harvard University Press in 2007) and Evolutionäre Anthropologie (published with Junius in 2015). Bones and Ochre tells the scientific and cultural history of paleoanthropology and to a lesser degree archeology through the ‘biography’ of the most likely first fossil human skeleton discovered in 1823. Evolutionäre Anthropologie is an introduction to the history of evolutionary anthropology for scholars, students, and the interested public.