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History Within

The Science, Culture, and Politics of Bones, Organisms, and Molecules

History Within

The Science, Culture, and Politics of Bones, Organisms, and Molecules

Personal genomics services such as 23andMe and Ancestry.com now offer what once was science fiction: the ability to sequence and analyze an individual’s entire genetic code—promising, in some cases, facts about that individual’s ancestry that may have remained otherwise lost. Such services draw on and contribute to the science of human population genetics that attempts to reconstruct the history of humankind, including the origin and movement of specific populations. Is it true, though, that who we are and where we come from is written into the sequence of our genomes? Are genes better documents for determining our histories and identities than fossils or other historical sources?
           
Our interpretation of gene sequences, like our interpretation of other historical evidence, inevitably tells a story laden with political and moral values. Focusing on the work of Henry Fairfield Osborn, Julian Sorell Huxley, and Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza in paleoanthropology, evolutionary biology, and human population genetics, History Within asks how the sciences of human origins, whether through the museum, the zoo, or the genetics lab, have shaped our idea of what it means to be human. How have these biologically based histories influenced our ideas about nature, society, and culture? As Marianne Sommer shows, the stories we tell about bones, organisms, and molecules often change the world.

496 pages | 29 halftones, 6 line drawings | 6 x 9 | © 2016

Biological Sciences: Evolutionary Biology, Paleobiology, Geology, and Paleontology

History: History of Ideas, History of Technology

History of Science

Reviews

"Across more than 500 pages, Sommer capably conveys the complexity of [the lives of Henry Fairfield Osborn, Julian Huxley, and Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza], particularly the contestations and accusations that their projects provoked. It is as yet too early to say whether disciplines like social and environmental epigenetics will fulfill their ambitious task, but their practitioners would do well to heed lessons learned from past attempts to read human history into biology."

Science

"This is good, solid scholarly research. The scientific issues are discussed clearly and effectively, and the history is first-rate. These three scholars--Osborn, Huxley, and Cavalli-Sforza--separated by time, space, and ideology, are nevertheless bound by the concentration and exercise of scientific power, and by the ambition to narrate human ancestry with the authoritative voice of science. One comes away with an appreciation for the ethnographic generalization that the ancestors are always sacred; consequently, even in science, nobody can study human diversity or origins apolitically."

Metascience

“With History Within, Sommer sets out to understand the role of the life sciences over the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries in the expanding landscapes of public and popular history. Through the works of three key figures—Osborn, Huxley, and Cavalli-Sforza—she analyzes the different ways in which evolutionary theory framed the past of the human species and not just for its own sake, but as the ground upon which moral and political visions for a just society and future would be built. In doing so, she frames the historical narrative in terms of a few key concepts: that of ‘phylogenetic memory’ on the one hand, and the ‘genographic network’ on the other. History Within is an admirably erudite book, rich in historical detail and expansive in its understanding of the works of these three historically influential figures.”

Nadia Abu El-Haj, Barnard College, Columbia University

“Sommer carefully examines history and memory, as embodied and expressed in some particular areas of human biology concerned with evolution. With this book, she presents the intriguing notion of a ‘history within’ and offers much in her deep exploration into the intersections of history, memory, and human evolution.”

Vassiliki Betty Smocovitis, University of Florida

History Within offers an ambitious analysis of efforts to construct scientific narratives about human evolution and biological variation over the long twentieth century. Sommer focuses on three distinctive episodes that, when considered together, span more than a century to arrive at our contemporary genomic age. Specifically, she examines the ideas and strategies of three men: Henry Fairfield Osborn, Julian Huxley, and Luca Cavalli-Sforza. For Sommer, each serves as a representative of three successive eras of academic efforts to read human history through the evolutionary sciences. Throughout History Within, Sommer presents a multitude of fresh, fascinating materials that show how ideas about history itself have animated thought about what it means to be human. A leader in the emerging field of the history of biological anthropology, Sommer is well positioned to synthesize major themes, and the long period of time covered in the manuscript—more than 100 years—provides new and important contexts for evaluating contemporary attitudes about race and genomics. Sommer has written a rigorous social and intellectual history of the human-oriented life sciences that is sure to be an important contribution to the history of science.”

Joanna Radin, Yale University

"Marianne Sommer's intellectual history of what it meant to be human in the 20th century has received extremely positive reviews internationally. It is highly recommended for readers who are interested in the history of science, biology, anthropology, and paleontology, as well as those who are interested in socio-cultural history and biographical research. The author takes us on an exciting journey through the century-long history of paleoanthropology, evolutionary biology and population genetics."

Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Geschichte (translated from German)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part I. History in Bones: Henry Fairfield Osborn (1857–1935) at the American Museum of Natural History

Chapter 1. From Visual Memory to “Racial Soul”
Chapter 2. Paper Ancestors? or “A Word-Painting of the Scene and of the Man or Woman”
Chapter 3. The Hall of the Age of Man: The Politics of Building a Site of Phylogenetic Remembrance
Chapter 4. Creative Evolution, or Man’s Struggle up Mount Parnassus
Chapter 5. History Within between Science and Fiction

Part II. History in Organisms: Julian Sorell Huxley (1887–1975) at the London Zoo and Other Institutions

Chapter 6. If I Were Dictator: The Modern Synthesis, Evolutionary Humanism, and a Superhuman Memory
Chapter 7. Evolution in Action: The Zoo as a Site of Phylogenetic Remembrance
Chapter 8. Scientific Humanism in the Extended Zoo: History Within as the Basis of Democratic Reform
Chapter 9. Evolutionary Humanism: Planned Ecology and World Heritage Management through the Colonial Office, UNESCO, IUCN, and WWF
Chapter 10. The Ascent of Man Defended

Part III. History in Molecules: Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza (1922–) and the Genographic Network

Chapter 11. Human History as Brownian Motion, or How Genetic Trees and Gene Maps Draw Things Together
Chapter 12. Cultural Transmission and Progress
Chapter 13. The Geography of “Our Heritage”: From the Human Genome Diversity Project to the Genographic Project
Chapter 14. The Genographic Network: Science, Markets, and Genetic Narratives
Chapter 15. The Genographics of Unity in Diversity

Postscript
Notes
References
Index

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