
Published online:
21 September 2017
Published in print:
27 April 2017
Online ISBN:
9780226437064
Print ISBN:
9780226436906
Contents
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10.1 The convergence of gender, ethnicity, and “race” 10.1 The convergence of gender, ethnicity, and “race”
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10.2 Pigeons: “Watching them outside & … watch[ing] their insides” 10.2 Pigeons: “Watching them outside & … watch[ing] their insides”
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10.3 Darwin, Agassiz, and the “American school” of race theorists 10.3 Darwin, Agassiz, and the “American school” of race theorists
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10.4 Reading Types of Mankind: “What effect wd idea of beauty have on races in selection” 10.4 Reading Types of Mankind: “What effect wd idea of beauty have on races in selection”
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10.5 Reenter Blyth, the go-between 10.5 Reenter Blyth, the go-between
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10.6 “An original thinker”: Robert Knox 10.6 “An original thinker”: Robert Knox
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10.7 Knoxian aesthetics and Darwinian “sexual selection” 10.7 Knoxian aesthetics and Darwinian “sexual selection”
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10.8 The intersection of beauty, sexuality, and race 10.8 The intersection of beauty, sexuality, and race
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10.9 The innate repugnance to intermarriage 10.9 The innate repugnance to intermarriage
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Chapter
Ten Critical Years: From Pigeons to People
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Pages
291–330
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Published:April 2017
Cite
OXFORD ACADEMIC STYLE
Richards, Evelleen, 'Critical Years: From Pigeons to People', Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection (Chicago, IL , 2017; online edn, Chicago Scholarship Online, 21 Sept. 2017), https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226437064.003.0010, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
CHICAGO STYLE
Richards, Evelleen. "Critical Years: From Pigeons to People." In Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection University of Chicago Press, 2017. Chicago Scholarship Online, 2017. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226437064.003.0010.
Abstract
Chapter 10 discusses Darwin’s evolving views on sexual selection in a period of mounting racial and sexual tension in which a heightened sense of national identity reinforced the racial and gender superiority of the white middle-class male. It examines how Darwin drew upon the writings of the new racial determinists, notably the race theorist Robert Knox and the polygenists Josiah Nott and George Gliddon, in reaffirming his earlier Lawrence-derived thesis of an aesthetic factor in the differentiation of gender, class and race and discusses the relation of Darwin’s pigeon keeping to this.
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