The Science of Empire: Darwinism, Human Diversity, and Russian Physical Anthropology.

Ber Wiss

Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois at Chicago, and affiliated researcher, Tyumen State University.

Published: March 2020

The article explores deployment of the Darwinian narrative of the "natural history of humanity" in Russian physical anthropology in the late nineteenth to the early twentieth century. It traces two narratives developed by the leading Russian school of physical anthropology: one narrative advanced a universalist vision of collective scholarly enterprise working toward clarifying the missing links in the a priori accepted developmental evolutionary model. The other constructed a new language that undermined the idea of species/subspecies/races/nations/ as stable, externally bounded, and internally homogeneous units and attempted to rationalize imperial hybridity. The article's main focus is on the latter classificatory narrative, its relational methodology, and the protostructuralist units of comparison that it produced.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bewi.201900020DOI Listing

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